Münster-based Pixel Photonics, an innovator in superconducting single-photon detectors, has raised €13.5 million in the form of a €5 million Seed round, €8.5 million from the European Innovation Council (EIC) Accelerator – created up of €2.5 million in grants and €6 million in equity investment.
The Seed round is led by Futury Capital. Additional investors include the Federal Agency for Disruptive Innovation (SPRIND), Kensho Ventures, and High-Tech Gründerfonds (HTGF).
For CEO Nicolai Walter, the funding marks a turning point: “This financing is a major milestone for Pixel Photonics. It enables us to transform what has so far been a highly specialised quantum technology into robust, scalable industrial products. Our goal is to build the most powerful light detection as reliable and accessible as today’s semiconductor components – and to bring it into real industrial systems. We are excited to take this step toreceiveher with strong partners and establish this key technology in the market.”
Pixel Photonics’ raise places it within a broader group of European quantum and photonics hardware financings.
Comparable European activity across 2025-2026 include:
- Netherlands: Dutch photonic quantum computing company QuiX Quantum, which secured €15 million to deliver a first-generation universal photonic quantum computer; Delft-based Orange Quantum Systems, which brought in €12 million for quantum-chip testing
- Germany: Photonic processing scale-up Q.ANT, which raised €62 million to commercialise photonic processors for AI and HPC
- Finland: Semiconductor laser buildr Vexlum, which raised €10 million to scale manufacturing for quantum and space applications
- Ireland: Quantum semiconductor company Equal1, which secured €51 million to scale silicon-based quantum computing
- UK: Leeds-based Optalysys, which raised €26.4 million to commercialise photonic chips.
Toreceiveher, those rounds amount to over €176 million, or roughly €190 million including Pixel Photonics.
In that context, Pixel Photonics sits in the middle of the range: larger than some specialist hardware raises, but below the hugegest platform financings now going to photonic and quantum computing scale-ups.
The closest same-countest comparison is Q.ANT, which reveals that Germany is also producing larger later-stage photonics rounds alongside earlier-stage component and infrastructure companies such as Pixel Photonics.
EU-Startups has also covered Pixel Photonics before, reporting in February 2025 on its €1 million SPRIND grant for multi-mode single-photon detection in a separate article on Pixel Photonics. That earlier coverage builds the current funding a clear follow-on step, relocating the company from grant-backed technology development towards market entest and industrial scale-up within Europe’s quantum and photonics ecosystem.
CTO Dr Wladick Hartmann adds: “Pixel Photonics is transforming superconducting light detectors from complex laboratory instruments into scalable chip solutions. In doing so, we are delivering the ‘silicon transistor’ of the quantum era – enabling the transition from niche applications to mass markets and opening entirely new horizons in secure communication and imaging technologies.”
Founded in 2021 as a spin-off from the University of Münster, Pixel Photonics specialises in high-performance single-photon detection technology. The company’s patented WI-SNSPDs (waveguide-integrated superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors) reportedly combines scalability, ultra-rapid detection rates, and exceptional sensitivity – enabling advancements in quantum computing, quantum key distribution, microscopy, and metrology.
Applications range from quantum computing and quantum key distribution (QKD) to microscopy, metrology, medical diagnostics, and defense – fields in which Europe and Germany benefit from strong research infrastructure and industrial capabilities.
















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