AI matures while some of its pioneers have not yet
AI Boom
Lowers the Age of Startup Founders as Young Entrepreneurs Take the Lead
Ahmad Abdur
Rahman Khan was just 21 years old and finishing his second year at the University
of Waterloo, Canada, when he co-founded Anytool, an AI vulnerability
management platform. Soon after its launch, the startup was selected for Y
Combinator’s Winter 2026 batch, placing Khan among a growing cohort of
twenty-something—and even teenage—founders building cutting-edge AI companies.
According to
investors, the average age of startup founders is steadily falling,
driven by advances in artificial intelligence, lower costs of technology
development and growing uncertainty in the traditional tech job market.
“The median
age of founders backed by us last year was 29, with the youngest
cofounder being just 15 years old,” said Nitin Sharma, partner at
Antler India. “This compares with an average age of 35 for
founders we funded in 2023, when the AI wave had just begun.”
Similarly, Siddhartha
Ahluwalia of Neon Fund said the average founder age in the AI era
has dropped to around 25, compared with 35 during the SaaS boom.
The trend
gained global attention in November 2025, when Mercor, an AI
startup founded by 22-year-old Adarsh Hiremath and three cofounders,
reached a valuation of $10 billion, making them the world’s youngest
self-made billionaires. In the process, they surpassed the record
previously held by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
“I think the
average enterprise B2B founder used to be north of 35. Today, it’s firmly in
the 20s, and some are even teenagers,” said Apoorva Pandhi of Zetta
Venture Partners. Venture firms such as Blume Ventures and Elevation
Capital have also observed a similar shift.
Enabling
Factors
While young
founders have long been a feature of the tech world, investors say AI has
changed the game.
“Coding
agents are now available very early in a developer’s career, making it easier
to build sophisticated products with minimal effort,” said Ankit Gupta,
general partner at Y Combinator. “This gives a huge advantage to people
who’ve just come of age in the AI era, especially college students.”
Gupta added
that job insecurity in big tech is another major factor pushing young talent
toward entrepreneurship. “Either you become a high-agency person who solves big
problems, or you risk becoming irrelevant in the next few years,” he said.
One concern
investors had earlier was whether young founders could scale as well as
build products. However, companies such as Mercor and Cursor have
shown that age is no longer a barrier.
“I think AI
changed my entire thought process,” Khan told ET from San Francisco.
“Large language models expanded what was possible, and that eventually led to
Anytool.” He co-founded the startup with two others he met at a hacker house in
San Francisco.
Changing
Evaluation Metrics
Investor
evaluation frameworks are also evolving. Y Combinator’s latest batch
includes two Indian teenagers, founders of InkVell, an applied AI
lab building agents for scientific research. Antler has backed a 15-year-old
founder working on an AI startup currently in stealth.
“At Upekkha,
we once looked for founders with over 10 years of domain experience. Now we’re
comfortable with 2–3 years,” said Prasanna Krishnamoorthy,
managing partner at the AI-focused accelerator.
Sharma of
Antler India noted that investors increasingly prefer AI-native, younger
founders who can iterate quickly and move aggressively on distribution.
“The conventional SaaS founder archetype may no longer work,” he said.
However, Sanjay
Nath, co-founder of Blume Ventures, cautioned that speed must be balanced
with domain understanding.
“At the
earliest stages, the market matters—but the founder is the real thesis,” Pandhi
said. “Recognising exceptional, non-obvious talent requires rethinking rigid
metrics and continuously refining how we evaluate founders.”
As AI
continues to lower entry barriers, the startup ecosystem is witnessing a
generational shift—one where age is no longer a constraint, and
ambition, adaptability and AI fluency are becoming the defining traits of the
next wave of entrepreneurs.