Y Combinator comes to India with Startup School, draws a crowd, faces some teething trouble

April 19, 2026
Y Combinator comes to India with Startup School, draws a crowd, faces some teething trouble


Backpacks slung over shoulders, some in shorts, some in crisp summer shirts, elevator pitches ready — founders as young as 16 scrambled for seats in a crowded hall in Bengaluru. All to hear what founders such as Zepto’s Aadit Palicha, Emergent’s Mukund Jha, and Meesho’s Vidit Aatrey had in common in order to be backed by Y Combinator (YC).

Anyone building in India or globally will know the heft of the Silicon Valley accelerator’s imprimatur. On a Saturday afternoon, many of the 2,000+ developers and builders who travelled from across the country for YC’s first startup school in India had something to take back. Some found potential hires, some were promised summer internships, and some secured new clients.

Jared Friedman, managing partner at YC who flew in from the US, could barely take a few uninterrupted steps before cofounders buttonholed him, pitching their startups between handshakes and hurried introductions.

Friedman told ET on the sidelines of the event that the scale and intensity of the turnout was unlike any he had seen before. “We decided to do Startup School in India for the first time because we believe that we are at the dawn of the second wave of Indian startups, with AI-native companies like Emergent and Giga ML targeting world markets, not just India,” he said.

Sharing a piece of advice for the builder community, he added, “We want more founders in India to be building at the edge of AI. If you are working on ideas that are 3-6 months old then you will not be able to build one of the best companies in the world.”

Also Read: Regulations slow growth but reward patient founders: Razorpay’s Harshil Mathur at YC Startup School