L2 & Infrastructure Funding Landscape
Aggregated from DeFiLlama fundraising data covering the L2 category (105 deals, $1.91B) and the broader infrastructure and developer tools category (743 deals, $14.36B — the largest funding category in Web3).
L2 Scaling Solutions
Market Overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total L2 deals | 105 |
| Total L2 capital raised | $1.91B |
| Average L2 deal size | $18.2M |
| Median stage | Series B |
| ZK vs Optimistic split | ~60% ZK, 40% Optimistic (by capital) |
L2 fundraising peaked in 2021–2023 with the ZK rollup arms race. By 2025–2026, market consolidation is underway: major L2s (Arbitrum, OP, zkSync, StarkWare, Polygon) are established, and new capital is flowing to differentiated niches (ZK application chains, L3s, and modular rollup infrastructure).
Top L2 Deals
| Project | Amount | Round | Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immutable | $200M | Series C | Temasek |
| zkSync (Matter Labs) | $200M | Series C | Blockchain Capital, Dragonfly Capital |
| Optimism | $150M + $90M | Series B + token | Various |
| Aztec | $100M | Series B | a16z |
| StarkWare | $100M | Series D | Greenoaks Capital, Coatue |
| Scroll | $50M | Series B | — |
| Taiko | $15M | Series A | — |
Technology Differentiation by Capital
ZK Rollups (zkSync, StarkWare, Aztec, Scroll, Taiko):
- Higher average round size ($80–200M Series B/C range)
- Longer development timelines justify larger capital needs
- Privacy-preserving ZK (Aztec) attracted a16z's largest crypto infrastructure bet
- zkEVM implementations competing for EVM-compatibility + ZK proofs
Optimistic Rollups (Optimism, Arbitrum):
- Optimism: $150M Series B. OP Stack (Superchain) strategy attracts ecosystem investment over protocol investment
- Arbitrum: Raised via Offchain Labs ($120M+) before decentralizing via DAO
- Base (Coinbase): No VC raise — built on OP Stack, funded by Coinbase balance sheet
Key insight: Optimistic rollup fundraising has shifted from protocol-level VC rounds to ecosystem fund rounds (OP Foundation, Arbitrum DAO grants). ZK rollups still require large capital raises for proof system development.
L2 Investor Profiles
| Investor | Investment Focus |
|---|---|
| a16z crypto | ZK infrastructure, long-hold thesis (Aztec, StarkWare) |
| Blockchain Capital | ZK rollups, infrastructure protocols |
| Dragonfly Capital | Cross-chain infrastructure, scaling |
| Temasek | Late-stage gaming/NFT infrastructure (Immutable) |
| Paradigm | Research-driven protocol infrastructure |
| Sequoia Capital | Platform infrastructure, developer tooling |
Broader Infrastructure & Developer Tools
Market Overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total infrastructure deals | 743 |
| Total capital raised | $14.36B |
| Average deal size | $19.3M |
| Largest category in Web3 | Yes — exceeds DeFi by capital |
Infrastructure is the dominant funding category in Web3. It includes custody solutions, developer APIs, node infrastructure, wallet security hardware, cross-chain bridges, data indexing, and blockchain middleware.
Mega-Deals That Define the Category
| Project | Amount | Round | Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fireblocks | $550M | Series E | — |
| Fireblocks | $310M | Series D | Sequoia Capital, Stripes |
| Bitmain | $422M + $293M | pre-IPO + Series B | — |
| Ledger | $380M | Series C | — |
| Dragon Coin | $320M | ICO | — |
| Alchemy | $250M | Series C | a16z |
| 0G Labs | $250M | Token pre-sale | — |
| Wormhole | $225M | Private | Brevan Howard, Coinbase Ventures |
Fireblocks ($860M total) demonstrates that enterprise custody and MPC wallet infrastructure attracts the largest rounds — driven by institutional crypto adoption requiring institutional-grade security.
Alchemy ($250M) represents the developer API/node provider category. Developer infrastructure (RPCs, SDKs, indexers) shows strong enterprise demand with recurring revenue models.
Wormhole ($225M) reflects the cross-chain bridge/messaging sector. Despite bridge hacks exceeding $2B industry-wide, category remains well-funded as the multi-chain future requires interoperability primitives.
Sub-Categories by Deal Structure
Custody & Key Management ($1.5B+ category):
- Institutional focus (Fireblocks, Ledger, Anchorage Digital)
- Later-stage rounds (Series C–E)
- Revenue-driven; acqui-hires by TradFi firms likely exit path
Developer APIs & Node Infrastructure:
- Alchemy, Infura (ConsenSys), Moralis, QuickNode
- SaaS revenue model; attractive to non-crypto-native VCs
- Consolidation underway as commodity RPC becomes a race to zero
Cross-Chain Infrastructure (Bridges, Messaging):
- Wormhole, LayerZero, Axelar, Chainlink CCIP
- High capital requirements; long development cycles
- Security track record increasingly important post-bridge hacks
Data & Indexing:
- The Graph ($12M Series A historically) → protocol level
- Dune Analytics, Nansen, Messari → analytics SaaS
- Goldsky, Envio → real-time indexing infrastructure
Key Investment Signals
-
Infrastructure beats applications in capital concentration: The $14.4B raised by infrastructure vs $9.0B by DeFi shows VCs prefer infrastructure bets — they benefit from all applications built on top.
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Security is a secular growth driver: Post-FTX and post-bridge hack awareness, institutional-grade security infrastructure (custody, MPC, formal verification) attracts premium valuations.
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Developer productivity tools follow L1/L2 adoption curves: New L2s and appchain ecosystems create demand for tooling. Ecosystem fund grants (Optimism, Arbitrum) increasingly fund tooling alongside VC.
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AI integration signals: 0G Labs ($250M), Alchemy (AI-enhanced RPC), and others adding AI/ML to infrastructure workflows. This AI-infrastructure overlap is a 2025–2026 funding theme.