This post was originally published on this site.
Arcade.dev raised $60 million in a Series A funding round to grow its secure action layer for production artificial intelligence agents, designed to prove which agent took which action, on behalf of which user.
The company will use the new funding for product development, ecosystem growth and hiring to support enterprise AI deployment as it scales from pilots to production workflows, it said in a Monday (June 15) press release.
“Agents don’t fail in production because the model is wrong,” Arcade.dev Co-Founder and CEO Alex Salazar said in the release. “They fail because nobody can prove that for any given action by an agent, whether that agent on behalf of that user can perform that action on that resource. That’s what we built.”
Arcade’s secure action layer provides authorization that ensures agents get the access the user has, only for the action they’re taking; reliability provided by tools built for the way agents use them; and governance that maintains a complete audit trail of every action, according to the release.
The company’s Series A funding round follows a 2025 seed round in which it raised $12 million. It brings the company’s total funding to $72 million.
The latest round was led by SYN Ventures, with strategic investment from Morgan Stanley and Wipro, per the release.
Advertisement: Scroll to Continue
Jay Leek, managing partner at SYN Ventures and board director at Arcade, said in the release agents are now at the point where adoption has outrun the infrastructure that makes the technology safe.
“Arcade is the only company we’ve seen that built for the production reality from day one, which is why every serious enterprise agent deployment is going to run through them,” Leek said.
Salazar said in a Friday (June 12) blog post that every enterprise is grappling with how to let agents act inside the company without losing control of what the agents do.
“The answer is obvious now, and we have a two-year head start on everyone just starting to realize how big it is,” Salazar said. “We’re not slowing down. The $60 million is to accelerate: more tools, deeper governance, broader reach, and faster, more powerful releases, so no one can catch up.”

