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Thailand’s AI firm Amity raised $100 M Series D funding to expand across Southeast Asia

One of the biggest GenAI-focused investments in Southeast Asia to date, Amity, a Thai software and AI company, announced a $100 million Series D funding round.

Amity released a statement on Wednesday stating that EDBI, Asia Partners, SMDV, and other investors, including CMLIM Capital, led the round. Amity now has $160 million in total funding after the round.

According to Amity, the funding can hasten the company’s development of agentic AI and vertical AI models. Additionally, it can bolster Amity’s AI Research & Application Center (ARAC) and help the company expand throughout Southeast Asia and Europe. In 2026, the company intends to pursue strategic acquisitions, develop regional go-to-market capabilities, and expand ARAC in Singapore. Additionally, Amity plans to go public in 2027.

The core of Amity’s strategy is its “Build, Buy, Bridge” 3B approach. The strategy entails expanding through mergers and acquisitions, integrating capabilities across its portfolio to commercialize enterprise AI solutions, and advancing AI development through ARAC.

The company’s annualized revenue exceeded $100 million in 2025, more than ten times since 2022, according to Korawad Chearavanont, Executive Chairman and Founder of Amity. The company’s primary focus is on creating agentic AI systems that carry out business processes and vertical AI models that are suited to particular industries.

A portion of the funding, according to Touchapon Kraisingkorn, Chairman of ARAC and co-founder of Amity, will be utilized to advance agentic AI throughout the company’s ecosystem, which includes Amity Accentix, Tollring, Amity Solutions, EGG Digital, and Amity-Nordstar, as well as to develop industry-specific AI, particularly in retail and telecommunications.

According to Yeung Chia Li, a senior partner at EDBI, Amity’s growth in Singapore will improve its capacity to meet the needs of international businesses and encourage wider adoption of AI.

Co-founder of the Singapore-based private equity firm Asia Partners, Vorapol Supanusonti, emphasized the company’s approach of integrating acquisitions and research to create AI-driven platforms.

 

 

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