Insider Brief
- Luxonis raised $14 million in Series A funding to expand its OAK camera and DepthAI software platform for robotics and industrial automation.
- The round was led by Denali Growth Partners, with participation from Taiwania Capital, and Luxonis said the capital will support commercial expansion, product development and production of its OAK camera platform.
- Luxonis said the funding will also support supply-chain capacity, the OAK4 ecosystem, edge AI development, hiring and new devices for industries including agriculture, robotics, defense, industrial automation, medical technology and warehousing.
Luxonis announced raising $14 million in Series A funding to expand its camera and software platform for robotics and industrial automation.
The round was led by Denali Growth Partners, with participation from Taiwania Capital, according to the company. Luxonis said the funding will support commercial expansion, product development and production of its OAK camera platform.
Luxonis builds cameras and software that help robots and automated systems interpret their surroundings. Its OAK devices combine sensors and on-device computing in a single unit and are paired with DepthAI, the company’s open-source software platform.
Luxonis said the funding will be used in these areas:
- Support development of the next generation of edge AI architectures.
- Expand supply-chain capacity.
- Advance the OAK4 ecosystem, which launched in December 2025.
- Grow its research and development, go-to-market and engineering-support teams.
- Work with more customers on production deployments.
- Launch new devices at accessible price points and in flexible form factors for industries including agriculture, advanced robotics, defense, industrial automation, heavy machinery, medical technology and warehousing.
Luxonis said it plans to launch new devices at accessible price points and in flexible form factors for industries including agriculture, advanced robotics, defense, industrial automation, heavy machinery, medical technology and warehousing.
“After more than seven years building Luxonis with the support of friends and family, we’re delighted to close our first institutional round and welcome Denali and Taiwania to our board,” CEO Bradley Dillon said in the announcement. “They bring a wealth of experience that will help us accelerate our already rapid growth as we give machines the human perception they need to take on the world’s physical work.”