How much has Divergent Technologies raised?
Divergent Technologies has raised more than $1 billion since founding, with a latest major disclosed round of $290 million in September 2025 at a $2.3 billion valuation. The capital is being used to scale DAPS for aerospace and defense and to build higher-output production capacity such as Monolith One and the Long Beach factory.
- Total raised
- $1B+ reported
- Disclosed rounds
- Series C, D, E plus debt
- Latest round
- $290M Series E
- Latest valuation
- $2.3B (2025)
- First raised
- Early capital pre-2022
- Notable backer
- Rochefort Asset Management
Divergent Technologies's funding rounds
Divergent's public funding history shifts from automotive DAPS scale-up to defense manufacturing capacity.
- Apr 2022Series C - $160MBacked by investors including John L. Thornton, Tom Steyer, Hedosophia, and others.
- Nov 2023Series D - $230MLed by Hexagon AB with a $100M investment, alongside new and existing institutional and family-office investors.
- Jun 2024Debt financing - reported $47MReported venture debt / debt capital used during the commercial scale-up period.
- Sep 2025Series E - $290M at $2.3B valuationLed by Rochefort Asset Management; $250M equity and $40M debt to scale aerospace and defense production.
- Jun 2026$1B+ total funding reportedPress coverage reports more than $1B raised since the company was launched by Kevin and Lukas Czinger.
How much has Divergent Technologies raised in total?
Divergent has raised more than $1B in total according to 2026 press coverage. The largest fully itemized public rounds are the $160M Series C in 2022, $230M Series D in 2023, and $290M Series E in 2025.
The latest Series E was a hybrid capital package: $250M in equity and $40M in debt. That mix makes sense for a company scaling physical production capacity, because printers, factories, robotics, qualification work, and inventory require different capital than pure software growth.
Who are Divergent Technologies's investors?
Rochefort Asset Management led the Series E, making it the most visible latest-stage backer. Hexagon AB led the Series D with a $100M investment, which is strategically relevant because Hexagon sells industrial measurement, manufacturing, and digital-reality technology.
Earlier investors and backers reported across funding coverage include John L. Thornton, Tom Steyer, Hedosophia, Horizons Ventures, Bridge Bank, and other institutional or family-office capital. The mix shows both financial and industrial investors underwriting DAPS as a production platform.
Why did the valuation move to $2.3B?
Divergent's valuation rose because the market is valuing flexible defense manufacturing capacity, not just additive-manufacturing novelty. DAPS promises rapid design changes, reduced fixed tooling, high-volume metal printing, and automated assembly, which map directly to defense programs facing supply-chain and replenishment constraints.
The Long Beach factory and Monolith One announcement strengthened that story: investors can point to a specific throughput plan, not just a lab technology.
Is Divergent profitable, and will it IPO?
Divergent has not disclosed profitability, and the company is still in a capital-intensive scale-up phase. Public signals point to revenue growth and major customer demand, but also to heavy investment in printers, factories, quality systems, and defense production.
No IPO has been announced. A more likely near-term milestone is proving that DAPS can meet high-volume defense production targets while maintaining quality and unit economics across multiple product families.
What does Divergent's funding mean if you sell into them?
Divergent's funding is a strong buying signal for vendors tied to factory scale: industrial automation, robotics, quality management, cybersecurity, export-control compliance, manufacturing execution systems, PLM, data infrastructure, and supply-chain software. It is also a signal that procurement will become more formal as the company moves deeper into defense.
The strongest seller angle is to attach to production expansion. Long Beach, Monolith One, aerospace and defense part families, and customer programs each create urgent operational budgets.
As of June 2026.Sources:Divergent - Series EPR Newswire - Series DNew York Post - Monolith One
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