Crypto venture funding in the U.S. clocked in at approximately $861 million for the first three months of 2025, but was dwarfed by artificial intelligenceโs nearly $20 billion haul, according to data provided by Pitchbook, showing how investors continue to pivot towards AI.
Data shows that investors closed 795 deals in the U.S in AI from January to March, with blockbuster deals like Databricksโ $15.3 billion round and Anthropicโs $2 billion raise dominating headlines.
Cryptoโs largest blockbuster deal, in comparison, was Abu Dhabiโs MGX, with a $2 billion investment into Binance โ the first institutional placement in the crypto exchange. Other deals of note include a $82 million raise from payment infrastructure company Mesh, ETF issuer Bitwiseโs $70 million round, and digital asset bank Sygnumโs $58 million offering.
Prior reporting by Pitchbook shows that AI startups attracted one-third of global VC investment in 2024, totaling $131.5 billion, with nearly a quarter of new startups being an AI company across 4,318 VC deals, compared to cryptoโs $4.9 billion across just 706 deals.
Analysis: Has AI stolen cryptoโs venture dollars?
Blockbuster rounds from VCs in the AI space and headline-grabbing antics, such as OpenAIโs Sam Altman seeking trillions, and AIโs rise from technological novelty to household name thanks to transformer models, would make one think that thereโs suddenly an investor preference for one over the other.
Historically, all data shows that VCs have generally favored AI over crypto, with AI and machine learning attracting consistent funding thatโs expanded exponentially, according to Statista data, growing from $670 million in 2011 to $36 billion in 2020.
Thereโs only been one year where crypto beat AI for funding, and that comes with a caveat: narrower AI categorizations, like ABI Researchโs $22.3 billion AI estimate in 2021, suggest crypto briefly outpaced AI funding during the bullish crypto cycle before AI funding surged again to over $100 billion by 2024.
Keep in mind that all of this ignores crypto-native quirks like airdrops, which put fresh capital in the hands of users and, in turn, pump the token price, inflating the size of projectsโ treasuries.
A recent report from Dragonfly found that between 2020 and 2024, the 11 largest airdrops generated $7 billion. This wonโt close the gap between AI and crypto, but it shows that there are more ways to get a dollar than traditional venture capital.