Airbound, an Indian drone startup, has raised $8.65 million in seed funding led by Bodily Intelligence co-founder Lachy Groom, because it begins a drone-delivery pilot with a non-public hospital and works towards one-cent supply utilizing its ultra-light, blended-wing-body plane.
The seed spherical consists of participation from Humba Ventures and Airbound’s present investor Lightspeed Enterprise Companions, in addition to senior leaders at Tesla, SpaceX, and Anduril.
Based in 2020 by Naman Pushp — who was 15 on the time and is now 20 — Airbound has developed an plane utilizing a tail-sitter design (the place the drone sits vertically and launches upright like a rocket) and carbon fiber body, aiming to ship parcels at as much as 20 occasions decrease value than typical strategies and considerably cheaper than present drone supply methods. The plane makes use of a blended-wing-body form with two propellers, quite than the extra frequent quadcopter configuration. This allows the plane to take off like a rocket and fly like a aircraft.
Airbound is concentrating on one-cent deliveries by rethinking how vitality is used to maneuver items, founder and CEO Pushp mentioned in an interview.
Sometimes, electrical two-wheelers are utilized in India to ship payloads weighing beneath 3 kilograms, Pushp instructed TechCrunch, despite the fact that the automobiles themselves weigh round 150 kilograms (331 kilos) and value about ₹2 (about $0.02) per kilometer in vitality. Airbound goals to chop that value right down to as little as 10 paise (round $0.001) through the use of its drone, referred to as the TRT, which is constructed particularly for small payloads and removes the necessity for a human driver — decreasing complete transport weight by roughly 30 occasions. That, Pushp mentioned, interprets right into a 20-fold drop in vitality value per kilometer, making one-cent drone supply a possible finish state.
“There may be truly an unbelievable quantity of gaps between the place drones are at this time and the place they are often,” the founder mentioned. “You want 4 kilograms of drone to raise one kilogram of payload, which is insane to me. Vary is a damaged metric. There’s no idea of aerodynamic effectivity with drones “[right now].”
The plane’s rocket-like, blended-wing design eliminates the necessity for added propellers and heavy shifting components, bettering aerodynamic effectivity over typical quadcopters. By avoiding propellers that disrupt airflow over the wing, the drone maintains the next lift-to-drag ratio, decreasing the quantity of thrust wanted to remain aloft and making ahead flight considerably extra energy-efficient, the founder instructed TechCrunch.
Techcrunch occasion
San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025
The primary model of Airbound’s drone weighs 3.3 kilos and carries a payload of as much as 2.2 kilos, and the startup additionally goals for its second model to help a 6.6-pound payload whereas weighing simply 2.6 kilos itself.
A prototype of the second model is predicted to be prepared and flying by mid-next yr, with manufacturing focused for the primary quarter of 2027, Pushp mentioned.
“Whenever you get into the world of autonomy, logistics is only a physics downside. It’s a sport of effectivity and weight. And so if in case you have a decrease weight than anybody else and the next effectivity than others, you win,” Pushp mentioned.
He started engaged on Airbound through the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020, impressed by a video of Zipline, the on-demand drone supply firm. He submitted an early prototype — comprised of 2D slices held along with toothpicks and tape, then sanded to resemble a fiberglass physique — to a hackathon, the place it earned a $500 grant. That have prompted him to use to Y Combinator, although he was not accepted. As a substitute, he obtained a $1,000 grant from the 1517 Fund in 2021, adopted by a $25,000 verify from Model Capital and a $12,000 grant from Emergent Ventures.
At 17, Pushp obtained a time period sheet from Lightspeed, however waited till after his 18th birthday to signal it. “That was the primary legally binding doc that I signed,” he recalled.
The plane packs lithium-ion batteries — as a substitute of a generally used lithium-polymer battery pack. Lithium ion batteries usually have a cycle lifetime of 500 to 800 cycles, whereas lithium polymer lasts for round 100–200 cycles, Pushp mentioned.
“The largest value of working these drones finally ends up being their battery substitute prices,” he mentioned.
The drone prices Airbound $2,000 to make and ₹24 (round $0.27) per supply. The startup goals to chop the supply value to beneath ₹5 (roughly $0.05) by the top of 2026. It additionally initiatives reaching one million deliveries per day by the center of 2027, and to attain that, it plans to extend its manufacturing capability to over 100 drones a day. That is up from the startup’s present one-drone-per-day manufacturing price at its Bengaluru facility.
Airbound has began its first pilot program with Bengaluru’s Narayana Well being by way of which it should ship medical logistics for 3 months, aiming to finish ten deliveries a day of medical assessments, blood samples, and different crucial provides.
Nevertheless, Airbound additionally targets different sectors together with fast commerce, meals deliveries, and “just a few different smaller areas of last-mile” supply, the founder instructed TechCrunch.
Airbound additionally plans to transcend India after scaling to 1 million deliveries per day and enter the U.S. in three years. In the meantime, the startup can also be in talks with regulators together with India’s Directorate Basic of Civil Aviation to start out its flights quickly.
Up to now, Airbound has raised over $10 million in complete funding, and it has a staff of fifty individuals.
The most recent spherical will assist scale its manufacturing capabilities and develop operations. The pilot program may also assist enhance its service and cut back prices to higher put together for broader market adoption in 2026, the startup mentioned.