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Taktile Raises $110 Million For AI Decision Tools In Finance

Newsroom brief

Taktile raised a $110 million Series C led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives as it pushes AI agents into underwriting, claims, fraud and compliance decisions at financial institutions.

Verified against source materialEdited by SendTech Times Fintech Desk
Taktile Raises $110 Million For AI Decision Tools In Finance
Image source: Taktile

Goldman Sachs Leads Taktile's Series C

Taktile has raised a $110 million Series C led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, giving the financial AI company fresh capital for tools that automate regulated decisions inside banks and insurers.

Balderton Capital, Index Ventures, Tiger Global, Y Combinator and Dig Ventures also participated.

The company is positioning its Agentic Decision Platform as a control layer for financial institutions that want AI agents in credit, claims, fraud and compliance workflows.

Taktile says the platform combines AI agents, rules, context and human oversight so business teams can manage decisions that cannot be left to unmanaged model output.

The funding comes as financial institutions test whether AI can reduce manual work without weakening auditability or risk controls.

Taktile said demand accelerated in 2025 as models became more capable of handling high-stakes tasks that previously took employees hours to process.

Customer Claims Focus On Regulated Workflows

Taktile listed several customer and operating claims, but the strongest evidence is concentrated in workflow metrics rather than broad revenue disclosure.

Taktile said a major insurance customer uses the platform for several workflows and projects more than $90 million of claims-processing cost efficiencies from those deployments.

The announcement did not name that insurer, so the customer proof remains partly anonymized even though the efficiency figure is material.

The company also named Mercury, Monzo, Faire and Pleo as customers.

It cited outcomes including 95% automation in B2B underwriting and 75% fewer anti-money laundering false positives.

Those claims support Taktile's argument that financial AI demand is moving beyond chat interfaces into decision systems used by operating teams.

For bank and insurance buyers, the operating burden sits inside risk ownership.

Credit teams, fraud officers and claims managers need systems they can test, override and audit before AI agents take on regulated decisions that affect customers.

Taktile also links the platform to business teams rather than only engineering teams.

The company says heads of credit, fraud officers and other business owners can understand and control AI-driven decisions inside the system.

That claim matters for regulated institutions because the buyer is not only purchasing automation; the buyer is deciding who can approve, review and change decision logic when credit, claims or compliance outcomes affect customers.

Taktile CEO and co-founder Maik Taro Wehmeyer said general-purpose AI tools are not enough for mission-critical financial decisions where mistakes can cost millions.

His comment frames the product around governance and business control, not only model performance.

Expansion Capital Comes With Proof Gaps

Taktile plans to use the capital to expand AI solutions for banking and insurance and to grow across the US, EMEA and LATAM.

The company dates its founding to 2020, reports $184 million of total funding and lists offices across five cities: New York, Berlin, London, São Paulo and Iași.

Goldman Sachs Alternatives partner Christian Resch said Taktile combines technical capability with an understanding of regulated financial institutions.

Jade Mandel, a managing director in the same growth equity business, said banks and insurers had reported faster product launches, better risk outcomes and operational efficiency.

The round gives Taktile investor validation and named customer references, but the announcement did not disclose revenue, valuation, contract values or bank-level deployment counts.

The company now has to convert the $110 million round into measured adoption across regulated credit, fraud, claims and compliance teams.

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