fundraising/l2-infrastructure-funding

L2 & Infrastructure Funding Landscape

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v1.0.0·Updated 3/26/2026

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

MetricValue
Total L2 deals105
Total L2 capital raised$1.91B
Average L2 deal size$18.2M
Median stageSeries 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

ProjectAmountRoundInvestors
Immutable$200MSeries CTemasek
zkSync (Matter Labs)$200MSeries CBlockchain Capital, Dragonfly Capital
Optimism$150M + $90MSeries B + tokenVarious
Aztec$100MSeries Ba16z
StarkWare$100MSeries DGreenoaks Capital, Coatue
Scroll$50MSeries B
Taiko$15MSeries 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

InvestorInvestment Focus
a16z cryptoZK infrastructure, long-hold thesis (Aztec, StarkWare)
Blockchain CapitalZK rollups, infrastructure protocols
Dragonfly CapitalCross-chain infrastructure, scaling
TemasekLate-stage gaming/NFT infrastructure (Immutable)
ParadigmResearch-driven protocol infrastructure
Sequoia CapitalPlatform infrastructure, developer tooling

Broader Infrastructure & Developer Tools

Market Overview

MetricValue
Total infrastructure deals743
Total capital raised$14.36B
Average deal size$19.3M
Largest category in Web3Yes — 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

ProjectAmountRoundInvestors
Fireblocks$550MSeries E
Fireblocks$310MSeries DSequoia Capital, Stripes
Bitmain$422M + $293Mpre-IPO + Series B
Ledger$380MSeries C
Dragon Coin$320MICO
Alchemy$250MSeries Ca16z
0G Labs$250MToken pre-sale
Wormhole$225MPrivateBrevan 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

  1. 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.

  2. Security is a secular growth driver: Post-FTX and post-bridge hack awareness, institutional-grade security infrastructure (custody, MPC, formal verification) attracts premium valuations.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.