
True rack-scale design, built with the innovations of cloud hyperscale technology, to make running on-premises compute infrastructure as easy as cloud.
We are excited to announce Oxide's Series C $200M fundraise, a follow-on investment for Counterpart Ventures, and a mere 9 months after their $100M Series B announcement.
Demand for Oxide's revolutionary rack-designed computer has surged due to a rise in the costs of cloud computing and skyrocketing energy costs largely driven by AI. As the AI race continues to heat up, Oxide is meeting the demand for sovereign AI compute too: given its on-premise rack/sled design provides security for data that enterprise requires. Oxide's sales grew in 2025: meeting demand from national laboratories, federal government and corporations across the financial services industry, energy and growing data center market.
We initially invested in Oxide's Series A in August of 2022, and have continued our investment through their Series B and now Series C. All credit goes to the visionary founders Steve Tuck and Bryan Cantrill who have fostered a phenomenal culture while building the next amazing computer company on its pathway to long-term success.
The team is hiring at a rapid pace, click here to see the latest open roles.
View Oxide's blog post announcing the Series C, originally posted on their website or read below:
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We have raised a $200M Series C, and yes, you are permitted a double take: didn’t we just raise a $100M Series B? And aren’t we the ones that are especially candid about the perils of raising too much money?
Well, yes, on both fronts, so let us explain a little.
First, we have the luxury of having achieved real product-market fit: we are making a product that people want to buy. This takes on additional dimensions when making something physical: with complexities like manufacturing, inventory, cash-conversion, and shifting supply chains, product-market fit implies getting the unit economics of the business right. All of this is a long way of saying: we did not (and do not) need to raise capital to support the business.
So if we didn’t need to raise, why seek the capital? Well, we weren’t seeking it, really. But our investors, seeing the business take off, were eager to support it. And we, in turn, were eager to have them: they were the ones, after all, who joined us in taking a real leap when it felt like there was a lot more risk on the table. They understood our vision for the company and shared our love for customers and our desire to build a singular team. They had been with us in some difficult moments; they know and trust us, as do we them. So being able to raise a Series C purely from our existing investors presented a real opportunity.
Still, even from investors that we trust and with a quick close, if the business doesn’t need the money, does it make sense to raise? We have always believed that our biggest challenge at Oxide was time — and therefore capital. We spelled this out in our initial pitch deck from 2019:

Six years later, we stand by this, which is not to minimize any of those challenges: the technical challenges were indeed hard; we feel fortunate to have attracted an extraordinary team; and we certainly caught some lucky breaks with respect to the market. With this large Series C, we have entirely de-risked capital going forward, which in turn assures our independence.
This last bit is really important, because any buyer of infrastructure has had their heart broken countless times by promising startups that succumbed to acquisition by one of the established players that they were seeking to disrupt. The serial disappointments leave a refreshing bluntness in their wake, and it’s not uncommon for us to be asked directly: "How do I know you won’t be bought?"
Our intent in starting Oxide was not to be an acquisition target but rather build a generational company; this is our life’s work, not a means to an end. With our Series C, customers don’t have to merely take our word for it: we have the capital to assure our survival into the indefinite future. If our Series B left us with confidence in achieving our mission, our Series C leaves us with certainty: we’re going to kick butt, have fun, not cheat (of course!), love our customers — and change computing forever.