Home
Loading

aVenture is in Alpha: During this preview period, you should expect the research data to be limited and may not yet meet our exacting standards. We've made the decision to provide early access to our data to showcase the product as we build, but you should not yet rely upon it alone for your investment decisions.

aVenture is in Alpha: During this preview period, you should expect the research data to be limited and may not yet meet our exacting standards. We've made the decision to provide early access to our data to showcase the product as we build, but you should not yet rely upon it alone for your investment decisions.

Get in touch

  • Contact

  • Request a demo

  • Request data updates

  • Add a company

Research

  • Companies

  • Investors

  • People

aVenture

  • Sitemap

  • Feature requests

Member

Backed by

© aVenture Investment Company, 2026. All rights reserved.

San Francisco, CA, USA

Privacy Policy

aVenture Investment Company ("aVenture") is an independent research platform providing detailed analysis and data on startups, venture capital investments, and key industry individuals. It is not a registered investment adviser, broker-dealer, or investment advisor and does not provide investment advice or recommendations. The data provided by aVenture does not constitute recommendations or advice, whether by methodology, analysis, AI-generated content, or a statement written by a staff member of aVenture.

aVenture is not affiliated with any of the people, companies, organizations, government agencies, regulatory bodies, or investment funds we provide coverage for on this site unless explicitly stated otherwise. Users assume full responsibility for decisions made based on information obtained from this platform. Links to external websites do not imply endorsement or affiliation with aVenture. Any links that provide the ability to invest in a primary or secondary transaction in a company are for convenience only and do not constitute solicitations or offers to buy or sell an investment. Investors should exercise heightened precaution and due diligence when investing in private companies, especially those not independently audited.

While we strive to provide valuable insights with objectivity and professional diligence, we cannot guarantee the accuracy of the information provided on our platform. Before making any investment decisions, you should verify the accuracy of all pertinent details for your decision. To the fullest extent permitted by law, aVenture shall not be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, or financial damages arising from use of this site, whether by consumers of its contents directly or by persons or organizations covered by our research, even if we are advised of the possibility. Our best-efforts processes and correction request forms do not create a warranty or duty of care.

Profiles on this platform may include content generated in part by large language models (LLMs, artificial intelligence) that aggregate publicly available sources (e.g., SEC EDGAR, public filings, press releases). Source attribution is provided where known; always verify statements and claims here against original sources before relying on any data. Content on our site may contain inaccuracies, omissions, or what are commonly called 'hallucinations' if generated in part or in full by AI / LLMs. The risk can also exist even when content is written by a human, as internal and third-party sources may also have inaccuracies for the same or different reasons. While we randomly audit a proportion of content, this is not exhaustive.

We recommend that an independent auditor be hired to verify the accuracy of the information before relying on it for any sensitive decisions. By accessing this platform, you agree not to rely solely on any information generated by AI, aggregated, or sourced or written otherwise on this site, for investment, financial, or other decisions. aVenture assumes no responsibility for inaccuracies, omissions, or hallucinations. You must independently verify all data from primary sources. Use of this platform constitutes your waiver of claims for reliance-based damages, including negligent misrepresentation. To report an error, request a correction, or dispute information about a company or individual, contact us via our request data updates form.

Loading
Loading
Home
News
Helion, the Sam Altman-backed fusion startup, raises $465M to build a power plant for Microsoft

From TechCrunch

By Tim De Chant

June 4, 2026

Helion, the Sam Altman-backed fusion startup, raises $465M to build a power plant for Microsoft

Helion, the Sam Altman-backed fusion startup, raises $465M to build a power plant for Microsoft

Helion, the fusion startup backed by Sam Altman, announced on Thursday that it had raised $465 million in a new funding round that values the company at $15.5 billion.

The cash infusion lands as Helion is racing to complete Orion, its first power plant. The startup has set an aggressive timeline to deploy fusion power to the grid, as early as 2028 if it can deliver on the terms of its deal with Microsoft. 

The startup last raised $425 million in January 2025. Altogether, Helion said it has raised $1.5 billion.

The new round, a Series G, was led by Thrive Capital with a long list of participants, including new investors Alta Park Capital, Anti Fund, BoxGroup, Lux Capital, Peak XV Partners, and Bill Ford, along with existing investors, which include Capricorn Technology Impact Funds, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Mithril Capital, Dustin Moskovitz through Good Ventures Foundation, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, and a university endowment fund.

Helion’s approach to fusion power differs from many of its peers. Some use magnets to contain the superheated plasma required for fusion conditions, while others use lasers to compress fusion fuel until it reacts. In both cases, the majority of startups plan to use steam turbines to transform the intense heat into electricity.

But Helion, which uses magnets to compress the fuel, intends to harvest electricity straight from the magnets themselves. When fusion occurs in the plasma inside the reactor, it expands, pushing against the magnetic fields. That force can be drawn off the magnets as electricity, similar to how an electric vehicle can reverse its motors to provide braking force and recharge the battery.

Deuterium and Helium-3 are heated, then accelerated through magnets, compressed, and captured as inductive currentImage Credits:Helion

Such a configuration would dramatically improve the efficiency of a fusion power plant. But some fusion experts are skeptical it could work. That’s in part because Helion, unlike many of its competitors, doesn’t frequently publish in peer-reviewed journals, so physicists haven’t been able to poke at the theoretical underpinnings. David Kirtley, Helion’s CEO, argues that eventual results from the company’s fusion devices should be sufficient. “We don’t want to theorize about fusion,” he told me last year. “We just want to go build it.”

Helion isn’t alone in attracting fresh funding. The fusion sector has become an investor darling in recent months. Focused Energy and Thea Energy both announced new rounds last week: Focused for $240 million, Thea for $100 million. In February, Inertia Energy emerged from stealth with a $450 million Series A, and the month before, Type One Energy said it was in the process of raising $250 million for a Series B.

The investments have poured in despite fusion’s lengthy timeline. Though several companies have made progress in recent months on milestones they say pave the way to a viable power plant, most predict they won’t begin operating their first commercial-scale power plant until the middle of the next decade at the earliest.

Part of the appeal is fusion’s potential to deliver nearly limitless amounts of always-on energy using little more than seawater. For AI-focused tech companies, that’s an attractive proposition. But it also has the potential to disrupt other trillion-dollar energy markets if fusion power companies can aggressively drive costs down. The timelines might be a bit longer than VCs are used to, but the potential payoff could be a lot bigger.

View original article on techcrunch.com

Most Recent

Databricks hits $188B valuation, extending its run as AI’s favorite second act

Databricks hits $188B valuation, extending its run as AI’s favorite second act

Databricks has remade its image into an AI company and has published research on the cost savings of open weight AI models for coding.

Jul 17, 2026

Nuclear startup Valar Atomics in talks to raise new funding at $6B valuation

Nuclear startup Valar Atomics in talks to raise new funding at $6B valuation

The potential deal highlights a growing trend of complex, multi-stage funding rounds that mask true entry prices.

Jul 17, 2026

AI-powered travel agency Fora hits unicorn status, raises $60M

AI-powered travel agency Fora hits unicorn status, raises $60M

Travel agency Fora announced a $60 million Series D round led by Forerunner and Tactile Ventures, valuing the company at $1 billion.

Jul 16, 2026

Sheryl Sandberg leads $10 million investment in AI-powered vehicle inspection service

Sheryl Sandberg leads $10 million investment in AI-powered vehicle inspection service

The startup, founded in 2021, lets enterprise customers use smartphones to scan and spot vehicle damage.

Jul 16, 2026

Similar Posts

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Over the last several years, fusion power has gone from the butt of jokes — always a decade away! — to an increasingly tangible and tantalizing technology that has drawn investors off the sidelines. The technology may be challenging to master and expensive to build today, but fusion promises to harness the nuclear reaction that powers the sun to generate nearly limitless energy here on Earth. If startups are able to complete commercially viable fusion power plants, then they have the potential

Sep 14, 2024

Every fusion startup that has raised over $100M

Every fusion startup that has raised over $100M

Fusion startups have raised $7.1 billion to date, with the majority of it going to a handful of companies.

Dec 31, 2025

Fusion startup Helion hits blistering temps as it races toward 2028 deadline

Fusion startup Helion hits blistering temps as it races toward 2028 deadline

Helion's Polaris device hit 150 million degrees C recently, a milestone that nudges the company toward its commercial power plant that will sell electricity to Microsoft.

Feb 13, 2026

Commonwealth Fusion Systems just picked its first commercial site partly because of its proximity to Washington, D.C.

Commonwealth Fusion Systems just picked its first commercial site partly because of its proximity to Washington, D.C.

Commonwealth Fusion Systems will build its first commercial-scale power plant just outside of Richmond, Virginia, the company announced Tuesday, with a goal of hooking it up to the grid in the early 2030s. Fusion power has long been derided as being decades away, but the new milestone assumes the possibility of commercial operations within the next decade. That confidence is echoed by many in the field after the National Ignition Facility demonstrated two years ago that controlled fusion reacti

Dec 17, 2024

Most Recent

Databricks hits $188B valuation, extending its run as AI’s favorite second act

Databricks hits $188B valuation, extending its run as AI’s favorite second act

Databricks has remade its image into an AI company and has published research on the cost savings of open weight AI models for coding.

Jul 17, 2026

Nuclear startup Valar Atomics in talks to raise new funding at $6B valuation

Nuclear startup Valar Atomics in talks to raise new funding at $6B valuation

The potential deal highlights a growing trend of complex, multi-stage funding rounds that mask true entry prices.

Jul 17, 2026

AI-powered travel agency Fora hits unicorn status, raises $60M

AI-powered travel agency Fora hits unicorn status, raises $60M

Travel agency Fora announced a $60 million Series D round led by Forerunner and Tactile Ventures, valuing the company at $1 billion.

Jul 16, 2026

Sheryl Sandberg leads $10 million investment in AI-powered vehicle inspection service

Sheryl Sandberg leads $10 million investment in AI-powered vehicle inspection service

The startup, founded in 2021, lets enterprise customers use smartphones to scan and spot vehicle damage.

Jul 16, 2026

Similar Posts

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Over the last several years, fusion power has gone from the butt of jokes — always a decade away! — to an increasingly tangible and tantalizing technology that has drawn investors off the sidelines. The technology may be challenging to master and expensive to build today, but fusion promises to harness the nuclear reaction that powers the sun to generate nearly limitless energy here on Earth. If startups are able to complete commercially viable fusion power plants, then they have the potential

Sep 14, 2024

Every fusion startup that has raised over $100M

Every fusion startup that has raised over $100M

Fusion startups have raised $7.1 billion to date, with the majority of it going to a handful of companies.

Dec 31, 2025

Fusion startup Helion hits blistering temps as it races toward 2028 deadline

Fusion startup Helion hits blistering temps as it races toward 2028 deadline

Helion's Polaris device hit 150 million degrees C recently, a milestone that nudges the company toward its commercial power plant that will sell electricity to Microsoft.

Feb 13, 2026

Commonwealth Fusion Systems just picked its first commercial site partly because of its proximity to Washington, D.C.

Commonwealth Fusion Systems just picked its first commercial site partly because of its proximity to Washington, D.C.

Commonwealth Fusion Systems will build its first commercial-scale power plant just outside of Richmond, Virginia, the company announced Tuesday, with a goal of hooking it up to the grid in the early 2030s. Fusion power has long been derided as being decades away, but the new milestone assumes the possibility of commercial operations within the next decade. That confidence is echoed by many in the field after the National Ignition Facility demonstrated two years ago that controlled fusion reacti

Dec 17, 2024