The European Union is preparing a major push to help its most promising startups scale into global champions, with plans to mobilize up to €200 million per fund to back European unicorns. The initiative is aimed at addressing one of the region’s long-standing weaknesses: the difficulty of keeping fast-growing tech companies funded in Europe as they reach late-stage expansion.
The move reflects a broader effort to strengthen Europe’s startup financing ecosystem and reduce dependence on non-European capital for growth rounds. By channeling larger amounts of capital into dedicated investment vehicles, the EU wants to improve the availability of funding for companies that have already proven their business model and now need substantial resources to expand internationally, hire talent, and compete with U.S. and Asian rivals.
The headline figure — up to €200 million per fund — signals an ambition to create a more powerful late-stage funding layer in Europe. The policy is designed to support “unicorns,” the privately held startups valued at more than $1 billion, which often struggle to find investors willing to write very large checks at the scale required for global competition.
The article does not provide further operational details, but the direction is clear: Europe is trying to keep more of its best tech companies on the continent and give them the financial firepower needed to grow without being forced to look abroad for capital.