The number of active US venture capital (VC) firms has plummeted by more than 25% since its peak in 2021, reflecting a major shift in the industry as financial backers increasingly concentrate their investments in Silicon Valley’s largest firms. According to Financial Times, citing data from PitchBook, the total number of VCs investing in US companies fell to 6,175 in 2024, down from 8,315 in 2021.
This consolidation has funneled over half of the $71 billion raised by US venture firms in 2024 into just nine major players, including General Catalyst, Andreessen Horowitz, Iconiq Growth, and Thrive Capital, which collectively raised more than $25 billion. Smaller and mid-sized VCs, struggling to compete, are exiting the market at an accelerating pace.
Key drivers of this trend include a prolonged slowdown in IPOs and acquisitions, which have historically provided venture firms with opportunities to return capital to their investors. This delay has tested the patience of limited partners (LPs), who now prefer established firms with proven track records over new or smaller entrants.
Industry analysts warn that this environment could result in the failure of 30-50% of mid-sized VCs in the near future. John Chambers, founder of JC2 Ventures and former CEO of Cisco, remarked that the “big guys” like Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia Capital remain well-positioned, but smaller firms are facing increasingly “tougher” market conditions.
PitchBook’s Kyle Stanford highlighted the pressures smaller VCs face, noting LPs are hesitant to risk their allocations, preferring the security of partnerships with dominant firms. As a result, many start-ups are left with fewer funding options, while mega-firms dominate funding rounds for high-profile companies such as SpaceX, OpenAI, and Stripe.