Snabbit, a Bengaluru-based instant home services startup, has raised $56 million (approximately Rs 530 crore) in a fresh funding round, signaling growing investor confidence in India’s on-demand home services space.
The company has now raised a total of 112millioninthepasttwoyears∗∗,withitsvaluationclimbingtoaround∗∗112millioninthepasttwoyears∗∗,withitsvaluationclimbingtoaround∗∗350–360 million.
The funding round was co-led by Susquehanna Venture Capital and Mirae Asset Venture Investments, with Bertelsmann India Investments increasing its stake. Existing investors — including Nexus Venture Partners, Lightspeed, and Elevation Capital — also participated.
The One Number That Explains Everything
Snabbit founder Aayush Agarwal revealed the company’s core advantage in a LinkedIn post announcing the fundraise:
“247 metres. That’s the median distance our experts travel between two jobs. It is also the single number that explains why we just closed our Series D.”
This hyperlocal density is what sets Snabbit apart. The closer the jobs are to each other:
- Faster service for customers
- Higher earnings for workers (called “Experts”)
- Better unit economics for the platform
Agarwal explained: “Density compounds. Higher earnings for Experts, faster service for customers, meaningfully better unit economics for the platform.”
Growth Numbers: What the Company Has Achieved
| Metric | Performance |
|---|---|
| Daily jobs | Increased 4x in last 6 months |
| Micro-markets | Some handling 1,000+ jobs per day |
| Burn per job | Reduced by 50% over same period |
| Total funding (2 years) | $112 million |
| Current valuation | $350–360 million |
What Does Snabbit Do?
Snabbit operates in the instant home services segment — often called the next frontier of the convenience economy.
Users can book household help through an app with short turnaround times, including:
- Cleaning services
- Dishwashing help
- House help (first app-based category)
- Home cooking (next focus area)
The pitch is familiar: what food delivery did for restaurants and ride-hailing did for transport, platforms like Snabbit are trying to do for domestic work.
Why This Space Is Complex and Competitive
The home services market in India is estimated to be worth tens of billions of dollars, but remains largely informal. Most households still rely on local networks to find domestic help.
Challenges in this space include:
- Labour-heavy business model
- Service quality and trust issues
- Consistency across providers
- Need for reliable, trained supply base
Snabbit is addressing these by:
- Focusing on fewer cities (building depth, not spreading too quickly)
- Creating dense hyperlocal clusters
- Reducing burn while scaling jobs
Competition in the Instant Home Services Race
| Competitor | Focus Area |
|---|---|
| Urban Company | Largest player, broader services |
| Snabbit | Faster, frequent-use model, instant services |
Agarwal noted: “We are market share leaders despite very limited geographic footprint.”
What’s Next for Snabbit?
The company plans to expand both its reach and its offerings:
- Geographic expansion into more cities
- Home cooking services — Agarwal said: “Getting a meal prepared in your kitchen will soon be as convenient as getting help at home.”
Investor Sentiment: Why This Round Matters
This funding round signals that investors are willing to back companies that can show both growth and improving unit economics — in a space that has historically struggled with profitability.
Agarwal acknowledged the road ahead remains long:
“Two years ago, no one believed this category could exist. Today, it is the breakout consumer story of the decade. The path ahead is longer than the one behind. We treat this fundraise as a mandate, not a milestone.”
The Race to Own Home Services Has Begun
The push to bring household work onto digital platforms is accelerating. Snabbit’s $56 million raise — and its focus on hyperlocal density as a competitive moat — shows that investors are placing significant bets on this category.
Whether Snabbit can challenge the dominance of Urban Company and build a profitable, scalable model remains to be seen. But for now, the message is clear: the instant home services race in India is officially heating up.