Quick home-services startup Pronto, founded by Anjali Sardana, is in discussions to raise around $25 million in a fresh funding round that could value the company at close to $100 million, according to people familiar with the matter. The round is expected to be led by Epiq Capital, with participation from existing backers Glade Brook Capital, General Catalyst and Bain Capital. While the talks are progressing, the final valuation and structure of the deal may still evolve.
The proposed fundraise comes at a time when investor interest is accelerating in startups that promise near-instant services, mirroring the speed-led playbook popularised by India’s quick commerce sector.

Credits: Lapaas Voice
Betting on 10–15 Minute Home Services
Pronto is positioning itself around a bold promise: delivering essential home services such as electrical repairs, plumbing, and basic maintenance within 10–15 minutes. In a sector long dominated by scheduled, marketplace-driven models, the startup is betting that speed can unlock a new category of urban convenience.
The approach resonates with consumers in dense metropolitan areas, where the frustration of long waiting times for basic repairs is common. However, delivering on this promise consistently requires more than just demand—it necessarys highly coordinated operations, real-time dispatch systems, and a dense, trained workforce available across neighbourhood clusters.
A Step Up from Earlier Funding Rounds
If closed, the latest round would represent a significant jump from Pronto’s earlier capital raises. In August, the company raised $11 million from General Catalyst, Glade Brook Capital and Bain Capital Ventures to expand into new cities and strengthen backfinish operations. Before that, Pronto had secured $2 million, led by Bain Capital Ventures, to support its early rollout and workforce setup in Gurugram.
At the time of its previous funding, Pronto was handling 1,000–2,000 orders per day and had chosen a vertically integrated model, managing worker onboarding, training, and deployment internally rather than operating as a pure marketplace.
Rapid Scale Brings New Challenges
Since then, Pronto has scaled aggressively. The startup now operates in seven cities and processes close to 6,000 orders daily, underscoring growing demand for rapider home services in India’s largest urban markets.
However, scale comes with complexity. Maintaining 10–15 minute response times requires continuous worker availability, predictive demand planning, and resilient backfinish systems. Operational costs rise as cities expand, creating unit economics, utilisation rates and workforce productivity critical levers for long-term sustainability.
Bengaluru Emerges as the Tech Nerve Centre
As part of its next growth phase, Pronto has shifted its headquarters to Bengaluru, relocating its technology, product and data teams to the city. Customer support and certain operational functions continue to be anchored in Gurugram.
The relocate reflects a broader trfinish among instant-services startups, which are increasingly centralising engineering and leadership teams in Bengaluru to build scalable technology platforms. The city’s deep talent pool in data, logistics and product development has created it a natural base for companies building speed-first service models.
Competition Heats Up in Fast Home Services
Pronto is not alone in chasing the promise of instant home services. The segment is witnessing heightened activity, with new startups raising capital and established home-services platforms experimenting with rapider service formats. As competition intensifies, speed alone is no longer a sufficient differentiator.
The focus is gradually shifting toward service reliability, quality of professionals, pricing discipline and operational efficiency. Companies that can balance all four are likely to emerge as category leaders.
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Credits: Indian Startups News
The Road Ahead: Execution Over Expansion
For Pronto, the proposed funding is expected to fuel deeper investments in technology, workforce training and city-level execution. Having already expanded across multiple cities and scaled daily order volumes, the startup is entering a phase where execution discipline will matter as much as growth.
With capital flowing into the sector and customer expectations rising, the next chapter of India’s home services market will likely be shaped by companies that deliver speed without compromising on quality or economics—a test Pronto is now gearing up to face.
















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