San Francisco Maintains Dominance in Venture Capital
Despite recent concerns about losing its competitive edge, San Francisco remained a powerhouse in the technology and startup world in 2024. According to data from PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association, San Francisco-based startups attracted nearly one in four venture dollars invested in the U.S. last year, marking the largest portion of the industry since at least 2016.
Record-breaking Investments
Venture capitalists invested more than $50 billion in San Francisco companies in 2024, the second-highest tally ever and a 43% increase from 2023. The surge in investment is largely attributed to the rise of the artificial intelligence (AI) industry. San Francisco is home to not only some of the biggest and best-funded AI companies but also a thriving AI startup scene.
“San Francisco is clearly the epicenter of the AI technology revolution,” said Pete Flint, a general partner at NFX, a venture firm based in San Francisco. The city hosted four of the top 10 biggest venture deals nationwide in 2024, including the two largest: Databricks’ $10 billion funding round and OpenAI’s $6.6 billion round. Anthropic, another San Francisco-based AI startup, raised two separate $4 billion rounds, collectively accounting for nearly half of the city’s total venture capital investment.

Bifurcation in the Market
While a handful of large-scale AI developers received massive funding, there’s a “bifurcation” in the market between these giants and a large number of smaller startups innovating in the AI industry, many of which are also based in San Francisco, according to Renata Quintini, a managing director at San Francisco-based venture firm Renegade Partners.
The number of funding deals in San Francisco rose nearly 17% to 1,620 in 2024, representing about 10.6% of all funding rounds closed nationwide. The Bay Area’s venture industry has been focusing on startups closer to home, particularly in the AI sector, due to the region’s wealth of experienced AI developers.

Competitive Advantage
Many venture investors believe in the value of in-person work, especially in San Francisco, where startup founders and their teams are more likely to have serendipitous encounters with potential customers or other founders who can offer advice. This “compounding aspect” of networks in San Francisco gives the city a competitive edge, Quintini said.
The AI industry is still in its early stages, and experts predict further growth as enterprise companies begin to invest more heavily in the technology. “I think [San Francisco is] attractive today to early-stage firms, and I think it will be even more attractive in the next couple years,” Flint said.