A Crunchbase analysis published this week shows AI startups raised roughly $220 billion combined in January and February 2026, anchored by the largest startup funding month ever recorded. February alone totaled $189 billion in global venture activity, a figure that far surpasses any prior single month, with January contributing approximately $55 billion.
Three deals drove the numbers. OpenAI reportedly raised approximately $110 billion, reportedly valuing the company at around $730 billion according to reporting cited by Crunchbase data sources. Anthropic reportedly raised $30 billion, with reports citing a valuation of approximately $380 billion. xAI raised approximately $20 billion in January 2026, according to Crunchbase data. Together, these three rounds accounted for 83% of February’s record total.
The rest of the market told a different story. Seed-stage funding reportedly fell approximately 11% year-over-year in February 2026, according to analysis cited by Yahoo Finance and Crunchbase, a directional signal that early-stage AI formation is contracting even as headline funding soars. Waymo added approximately $16 billion in February, but autonomous vehicles aside, the non-mega-round market absorbed a small fraction of available capital.
The infrastructure commitment behind these bets is striking. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are projected to spend approximately $650 billion on AI-related infrastructure in 2026, according to analysis cited by Reuters and attributed to Bridgewater Associates. Private mega-rounds are funding the model and application layers. Public giants are funding the hardware beneath them.
The $220 billion number is real. What it doesn’t capture is that the AI funding market has split into two separate economies, one defined by access to hundred-billion-dollar rounds, and one where early-stage formation is slowing. Founders and investors working below the mega-round tier should read these aggregate figures with that context firmly in mind.