Britain’s artificial intelligence sector pulled in a record £8.3bn of investment last year, as global capital piled into a new generation of British AI companies and London tightened its grip as Europe’s pre-eminent technology hub.
New research from Barclays Eagle Labs found that funding into UK AI businesses surged through 2025 after a sluggish stretch for venture capital markets, fuelled by appetite for firms building everything from the picks-and-shovels infrastructure underpinning generative AI through to specialist legal and financial software.
The numbers underline just how rapidly AI has become one of Britain’s hottest investment narratives, with backers scrambling not to miss the next DeepMind-style breakout. The 2025 total represents a near-trebling on the £2.9bn raised by UK AI firms a year earlier, confirming a step-change in both deal flow and ticket sizes.
London remains squarely at the centre of the action. Almost three quarters of Britain’s AI fintech companies are now headquartered in the capital, according to the report, reflecting the city’s deep pool of engineering talent, financial expertise and proximity to global capital.
Much of the cash has flowed towards businesses thought capable of supplying the plumbing behind the AI boom, the compute power, software platforms and data architecture required to train and run large language models, rather than consumer-facing chatbots and apps. For investors hunting the next category-defining business, Britain increasingly looks like one of the few places outside Silicon Valley credibly producing AI firms with global ambitions.
Crucially, nearly half of all UK AI funding rounds last year came from first-time raises, suggesting a fresh cohort of start-ups is entering the market even as the contest for engineers and capital intensifies.
The Barclays Eagle Labs AI 100 cohort, its annual ranking of Britain’s fastest-growing AI businesses, has collectively raised £11.3bn, generates £734m in annual revenue and now employs more than 8,500 people. Software companies dominate the list, mirroring investor appetite for businesses able to monetise AI tools at speed as corporates rush to bolt automation and generative AI into day-to-day operations.
Abdul Qureshi, head of Barclays Business Banking, said: “The UK has no shortage of world-class AI innovation. The challenge is turning those breakthroughs into sustainable global businesses.”
The funding surge mirrors AI’s growing weight in wider markets. Nvidia briefly became the world’s most valuable listed company earlier this year as investors backed the firms supplying the silicon behind frontier models, while Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet continue to pour tens of billions into global data centre capacity, including Microsoft’s own £22bn commitment to a UK AI supercomputer build-out. London-listed asset managers and pension funds are coming under mounting pressure to ensure they are not bystanders to the trend.
Westminster, for its part, has moved aggressively to brand Britain as a destination for AI capital. The government’s AI Opportunities Action Plan, launched last year and updated in 2026, sits alongside a new Sovereign AI Unit charged with backing home-grown firms and preventing prized intellectual property from drifting overseas before it can scale.
Yet for all London’s dominance, the story is not solely a capital one. The North West’s AI ecosystem has expanded faster than London’s since 2019, the report notes, albeit from a far smaller base, as clusters built around advanced manufacturing and industrial AI begin to take root outside the M25. For SME founders weighing where to plant their flag, that quiet regional rebalancing may prove as significant as the headline £8.3bn.
