Sometime in the next few months, the US venture market will quietly cross a threshold that nobody was supposed to hit this soon. First-time financing activity through Q3 2025 was already just 200 deals behind 2021's record-setting pace, according to Private Markets Insights' coverage of PitchBook's 2026 US Venture Capital Outlook. And the headline number for full-year 2026, cited in PitchBook's midyear update as covered by GamesBeat, is even more striking: first financings are on track to exceed 7,000 deals by year-end, more than 1,300 above any prior record. To put that in plain terms: if you charted every year of first-financing data on a wall and threw a dart, you would miss 2026 by a country mile. ## The Forecast That Came True Ahead of Schedule PitchBook's own analysts deserve credit for seeing this coming. The firm's 2026 US Venture Capital Outlook, published in December 2025 and hosted by InvestGame, explicitly forecast that "the early stages of the market will see a surge in deal activity." What the outlook did not fully anticipate was the pace. By the end of Q3 2025, first-time financing activity was just 200 deals behind 2021's record pace, according to Private Markets Insights, and that was before the year had closed. The midyear 2026 picture, as reported by GamesBeat citing NVCA and PitchBook data, confirms the surge was not a blip. It was a structural shift arriving ahead of its own projected schedule. This matters because prior forecasts were made against a backdrop of genuine headwinds. The 2026 Outlook noted that public markets were near all-time highs but liquidity remained a major concern for venture, fundraising had not yet recovered, and geopolitical uncertainty was still a real variable, per the InvestGame-hosted PitchBook report. Beating a record by more than 1,300 deals in that environment is not a momentum story. It is a cost story. ## AI Lowered the On-Ramp, and Megafunds Noticed The mechanism behind the surge is worth understanding precisely, because it changes how you think about what kind of company to build right now. Artificial intelligence captured 65% of total US VC deal value through Q3 2025 and accounted for more than half of new unicorns, with the aggregate market value of AI startups exceeding $1 trillion, according to Private Markets Insights' analysis of PitchBook's data. But the more instructive figure is not the megadeal headline. It is the compression effect at the bottom of the funnel. When AI tools reduce the cost of writing code, generating design assets, automating customer support, and modeling financial projections, the minimum viable spend to get a company to a fundable milestone drops meaningfully. A founding team that once needed 18 months and a sizeable pre-seed just to reach a working prototype can now get there faster and cheaper. That means more teams can credibly show up to a seed conversation, which means more first financings. PitchBook's data validates the downstream logic: top-decile seed and Series A rounds by valuation exhibit higher annualized returns with lower loss rates than lower-valued rounds, per Private Markets Insights. Megafunds read that table and drew the obvious conclusion. ## Megafunds at the Seed Table The other half of the structural story is who is writing the checks. According to Private Markets Insights, five of the 20 most active seed and early-stage investors are now multistage firms. These are not dedicated seed funds with $50 million to deploy carefully. These are large funds with the balance sheet to make many early bets and follow the winners aggressively. Private Markets Insights describes their approach as deploying aggressive seed strategies, with less pressure on selectivity given their fund sizes. That changes the competitive dynamics for founders considerably: the investor across the table may have follow-on capital that a traditional seed fund simply cannot match. This also reshapes what "seed" means as a signal. When a megafund leads your seed round, the market reads it differently than a check from a solo GP. For founders who can get that stamp, the path to a Series A compresses. For founders who cannot, the crowded seed market still offers more options than it did two years ago, simply because more capital is flowing earlier. Either way, the 2026 environment rewards founders who move toward fundable milestones quickly, which is exactly what lower AI-assisted build costs make possible. ## What the H1 2026 Record Tells Founders The first half of 2026 broke VC records overall, driven in significant part by large AI investments, according to GamesBeat's coverage of the NVCA and PitchBook half-year data. That macro record is the backdrop, but the more actionable signal is in the early-stage composition. A record-breaking year at the top of the market is expected when you have large late-stage rounds pulling aggregate numbers up. A record in first financings is different. It means the pipeline of new companies entering the venture system is genuinely wider than it has ever been. For anyone thinking about when to start a company, when to raise, or how to position a seed-stage pitch, that context matters. The structural forces identified by PitchBook, namely AI cost compression and megafund participation at seed, are not scheduled to reverse. The Q1 2026 PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor confirmed dealmaking momentum was intact entering the year, and the midyear data reported by GamesBeat shows it has accelerated rather than stalled. The opportunity window is open, and the data says it opened earlier than even the forecasters expected. Watch for whether multistage fund participation at seed continues to climb as the year closes, and whether first-financing deal counts translate into a proportional uptick in Series A activity in 2027. That second-order effect will be the real confirmation that this surge has structural legs. ## Sources - AI and Mega-Funds Reshape Early-Stage Deals | PitchBook US Venture Capital Outlook
- 2026 US Venture Capital Outlook | InvestGame
- 1st half of 2026 breaks VC records thanks to OpenAI and Anthropic | NVCA/PitchBook
- Q1 2026 PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor
- Startup funding shatters all records in Q1 | TechCrunch
Sources
- Meta's Cred acqui-hire, Peregrine's $6.8b valuation, and Booz Allen's buy - Axios
- 1st half of 2026 breaks VC records thanks to OpenAI and Anthropic ...
- [PDF] Q1-2026-PitchBook-NVCA-Venture-Monitor.pdf
- [PDF] 2026 US Venture Capital Outlook | InvestGame
- Our VC outlook for 2026 in 90 seconds ๐ Read the full PitchBook analysis here, free to read: https://lnkd.in/gH2RMmz5 ๐ฅ Our 2026 outlook webinar is on January 21, open to everyone:โฆ | Emily M. Zheng
- AI and Mega-Funds Reshape Early-Stage Deals | PitchBook US ...
- AI and Mega-Funds Reshape Early-Stage Deals | PitchBook US ...
- The venture slowdown finally hit early-stage valuations, PitchBook data shows | TechCrunch
- To celebrate the release of our 2026 VC Outlook report, PitchBook ...
- pitchbook - TechCrunch
- Startup funding shatters all records in Q1