Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli tech sector raises $9b in funding in first half of 2025

Enterprise software led all high-tech with more than $3 billion invested in the first half of the year.

View of the Yokneam High-Tech Park, Sept. 8, 2024. Photo by Michael Giladi/Flash90.
View of the Yokneam High-Tech Park, Sept. 8, 2024. Photo by Michael Giladi/Flash90.

Israeli technology firms received more than $9 billion in private funding in the first half of the year, representing the strongest six-month period of the last three years, an Israeli nonprofit promoting innovation announced on Monday.

Some $9.3 billion was invested in Israeli high-tech since the beginning of the year, a 54% jump compared to the second half of 2024, according to a mid-year analysis by Startup Nation Central.

This recovery, which began in late 2024, accelerated in Q2 2025, with funding rising from $3.3 billion in Q1 to $6 billion in Q2, despite a decrease in the number of investment rounds from 214 to 151, the report found.

Enterprise software led all high-tech sectors with more than $3 billion invested in the first half of the year due to a $2 billion deal with Safe Superintelligence, followed by cybersecurity, with nearly $2 billion invested. Fintech was third with some $750 million, followed by health tech with about $620 million.

“The quantity-to-quality trend we’ve been tracking is only getting stronger, with fewer deals, but each round is larger and more focused,” said Yariv Lotan, VP of Digital Products and Data at Startup Nation Central. “Along with active dealmaking in stealth-stage companies, this reinforces the ‘startup baby boom’ trend we pointed to at the end of 2023 and mark a standout investment opportunity in Israel’s tech ecosystem.”

The peak year for foreign investment in Israeli high-tech was in 2021, with more than $30 billion in funding.

The Ivy League school states that the lawsuit has failed to prove discrimination, and that it has taken “sustained, institution-wide efforts” to address campus antisemitism.
“The opening of the embassy in Jerusalem will be another significant step in strengthening relations between our countries and nations,” said Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar.
“We must ensure this failed system doesn’t continue reinforcing the conditions that have fueled terrorism for generations,” the lawmakers wrote.
“By taking steps to dismantle these financial channels, the United States aims to deny the Iranian regime the resources it uses to threaten regional stability,” said State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott.
“The pro-terror flotilla is a ludicrous attempt to undermine President Trump’s successful progress toward lasting peace in the region,” the U.S. treasury secretary said.
“We have a responsibility to confront antisemitism, defend democratic values and ensure every resident feels safe,” said Steven Meiner, mayor of Miami Beach.