Luxonis raised a $14 million Series A led by Denali Growth Partners, with Taiwania Capital participating, announced July 2, 2026. Founded in 2019, Luxonis makes OAK cameras — sensors with on-device computation — and the DepthAI software stack that gives robots and automated systems spatial perception at the edge.

Its latest OAK4, launched in December 2025, delivers 52 TOPS of on-device inference. The company reports 6 million DepthAI SDK downloads, more than 60 Fortune 500 customers and 17 of the Dow Jones 30 as clients — traction in the component layer rather than the headline-grabbing robot itself. No valuation was disclosed.

Humanoids get the attention, but perception is the layer everything above it depends on, and it is increasingly a business of its own. Cheap, capable, on-device vision is to robotics what commodity sensors were to smartphones — an enabling layer that scales the whole ecosystem.

Key Facts

  • $14M Series A led by Denali Growth Partners; July 2, 2026
  • Taiwania Capital participating; valuation undisclosed
  • OAK cameras plus the DepthAI edge-perception stack
  • OAK4 (Dec 2025) delivers 52 TOPS of on-device inference
  • 6M SDK downloads; 60+ Fortune 500 customers

Frequently Asked

How much did Luxonis raise?

A $14 million Series A led by Denali Growth Partners, with Taiwania Capital participating, announced July 2, 2026. No valuation was disclosed.

What does Luxonis make?

OAK cameras — sensors with on-device computation — and the DepthAI software stack that gives robots and automated systems spatial perception at the edge.

Why does the perception layer matter?

Every embodied system depends on seeing the world reliably; cheap, capable on-device vision is an enabling layer that scales robotics much as commodity sensors scaled smartphones.