Taktile, a New York-based AI decisioning platform for financial institutions, closed a $110 million Series C on June 24, 2026. Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives led the round, with Tiger Global, Index Ventures, Balderton Capital, Y Combinator, and Dig Ventures participating. Total funding now stands at $184 million, according to TechStartups and Yahoo Finance.
The company builds software that lets banks and insurers combine AI agents, rules engines, contextual data, and human oversight to automate decisions across underwriting, claims processing, fraud detection, customer onboarding, and anti-money laundering workflows. The distinction matters: this is AI operating inside the decision loops where errors carry legal, compliance, and credit risk, not a chatbot bolted onto a dashboard.
Operating Metrics
Taktile says it powers millions of decisions daily. One major insurer projects more than $90 million in claims-processing efficiencies from use cases running on the platform. Across its customer base, the company reports 95% automation in B2B underwriting and 75% fewer AML false positives, according to TechStartups.
The company did not disclose its valuation. In a market where inflated private marks have drawn scrutiny, Taktile chose to emphasize deployment metrics and institutional logos over a headline number.
The Syndicate Signal
Goldman Sachs leading a Series C for an AI company that automates financial decision-making is not a typical venture bet. It signals that institutional capital now views agentic AI in regulated industries as production infrastructure, not speculative technology.
The broader funding context reinforces the pattern. TechStartups reported that nine of ten rounds filed on June 24 carried a direct AI product, infrastructure, or governance angle. Goldman Sachs Alternatives, Tiger Global, Khosla Ventures, Menlo Ventures, and Speedinvest all appeared in the same 12-hour window, backing companies that sit near regulated decision-making or core market infrastructure.
Where Financial AI Funding Is Heading
Taktile operates in a specific band of the AI market: domain-native control layers for industries where generic productivity tools fail compliance and audit requirements. Banks do not need another copilot suggesting actions. They need systems that can execute decisions within regulatory constraints, maintain audit trails, and demonstrate outcomes to examiners.
The $110M round sits alongside Runlayer’s $30M Series A for agent governance and Baseten’s $1.5B Series F for AI inference infrastructure as evidence that venture capital in mid-2026 is concentrating on the operating layer beneath AI applications, not the applications themselves. The companies winning funding are the ones building the rails that regulated enterprises require before agents can make decisions worth real money.
Taktile is headquartered in New York City, with offices in Berlin and London.