Victoria’s startup ecosystem offers distinct advantages for founders and investors. Victoria’s five fintech unicorns demonstrate the strength of the state’s financial services ecosystem. The Melbourne Biomedical Precinct anchors a healthtech sector that accounts for 70% of life science deals in Oceania. And with 188 AI companies clustered in Melbourne’s CBD, the state has become Australia’s largest hub for artificial intelligence startups. Explore the sectors below to find the programs, funding, and infrastructure relevant to your startup.

Healthtech & Medtech

Victoria is home to one of the world’s largest biotechnology clusters, from global companies like CSL and GlaxoSmithKline to homegrown tech unicorns PolyNovo, Mesoblast, Clinuvel and Telix Pharmaceuticals. Approximately 18% of Victorian startups focus on healthtech, and the sector created 1,100 jobs between 2019 and 2021, adding new jobs 55% faster than the broader healthcare sector.

World-class research infrastructure

The Melbourne Biomedical Precinct in Parkville brings together hospitals, research institutes, and universities in one of the largest health and life sciences clusters in the world. Melbourne delivers 58% of Australian pharmaceutical exports and is home to 36% of Australia’s life sciences companies. The state is ranked in the top 10% of life science markets globally and accounts for 70% of life science deals in Oceania.

The Jumar Bioincubator, which opened in April 2024, is backed by $65 million in industry and government investment. Founded by CSL, WEHI, and the University of Melbourne with investment from Breakthrough Victoria, it provides wet lab space and commercialisation support for early-stage biotech ventures. ANDHealth offers accelerator programs for medtech startups, while Australian Medical Angels provides angel investment for early-stage healthcare founders.

Explore HealthTech in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

5 healthtech unicorns (PolyNovo, Mesoblast, Clinuvel, Telix, Neuren Pharmaceuticals)

18% of Vic startups focus on HealthTech

Top 10% of life science markets globally

Home to 70% of Life Science deals in Oceania

Artificial Intelligence (AI) & Big Data

Melbourne’s CBD hosts 188 AI companies, making it Australia’s most significant single AI cluster. Victoria is home to over 20% of Australia’s AI startups and scaleups, with companies applying machine learning and data analytics across sectors including healthcare, finance, agriculture, and manufacturing. The state has two of four Commonwealth-funded National AI Adopt Centres, supporting businesses to integrate responsible AI into their operations.

Research infrastructure and talent

Victoria has three AI supercomputers: at La Trobe University (medical and biotech applications), Monash University (medical and climate research), and ResetData’s sovereign public AI supercomputer in Melbourne’s CBD. Six Victorian universities have dedicated AI research centres, including the University of Melbourne AI & Autonomy Lab, RMIT AI Innovation Lab, and Deakin Applied AI Institute. The Australian Centre for Artificial Intelligence in Medical Innovation (ACAMI) at La Trobe University, backed by $10 million from the Victorian Government, is the world’s first university centre specialising in AI for immunotherapies and cancer vaccines.

Boab AI, Australia’s first AI-focused scaleup accelerator, is backed by $1.5 million from LaunchVic and $8 million from venture capital firm Artesian. The program supports 32 mature AI scaleups over four years, with each company receiving a minimum of $300,000 in capital. Melbourne is also becoming a regional data centre hub, with 47 co-location data centres representing 30% of Australia’s $30 billion data centre sector.

Explore AI & Big Data in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

188 AI companies in Melbourne CBD (Australia’s most significant cluster)

20%+ of Australia’s AI startups and scaleups

6 universities with dedicated AI centres

47 co-location data centres (30% of Australia’s sector)

Fintech

Victoria is home to five homegrown fintech unicorns, collectively valued at over US$30 billion. Airwallex, Afterpay, Judo Bank, PEXA, and Zeller have all achieved unicorn status since founding in Melbourne. More than 330 fintech startups operate across the state, working on innovations in payments, lending, insurance, and wealth management.

A supportive environment for growth

Australia’s regulatory environment supports fintech innovation through mechanisms like ASIC’s Enhanced Regulatory Sandbox, which allows fintech companies to test their services for up to 24 months without requiring a full Australian financial services licence. Open banking legislation has created new opportunities for startups to build products using customer data with consent.

Melbourne’s financial services sector provides both customers and talent for fintech ventures. Two of Australia’s top four banks, NAB and ANZ, are headquartered in Melbourne, along with major superannuation funds including AustralianSuper and UniSuper. The Victorian Government sponsors Intersekt, Fintech Australia’s annual conference, which brings together the local fintech community each year.

Explore FinTech in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

5 fintech unicorns headquartered in Melbourne

330+ fintech startups in Victoria

US$30 billion+ combined unicorn valuations

ASIC Enhanced Regulatory Sandbox for testing

Deeptech

Victoria’s deeptech sector builds on strong foundations in university research, advanced manufacturing, and quantum computing. The state’s universities are recognised globally for their research output, with multiple institutions ranked in the top 100 worldwide for science and engineering disciplines. This research strength creates a pipeline of intellectual property and technical talent for founders building hardware-intensive and science-based startups in areas including quantum technologies, advanced materials, robotics, and space systems.

Pathways to commercialisation

Breakthrough Victoria’s $2 billion innovation fund provides patient capital for deeptech ventures that require longer development timelines. Through its $100 million University Innovation Platform, Breakthrough Victoria is partnering with seven Victorian universities to increase the commercialisation of critical research. Each university has contributed funding matched by Breakthrough Victoria to create pre-seed investment partnerships, with typical investments around $500,000 per startup. The program aims to fund product concepts, prototypes and trials to help research with strong commercial potential progress through early development stages.

LaunchVic offers grants of up to $400,000 for programs designed to help early-stage founders building deeptech startups. The state’s advanced manufacturing precincts, including Fishermans Bend, provide facilities for prototyping and scaling hardware products. Victoria’s quantum computing research, led by institutions including the University of Melbourne and RMIT, positions founders to build on world-leading fundamental research.

Explore Deeptech in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

224 deeptech companies, including 4 unicorns

$100M University Innovation Platform across 7 Victorian universities

Active support and investment into AI and deeptech programs

Enterprise Technology / SaaS

Victoria has produced some of Australia’s most successful technology companies. REA Group, SEEK, and Carsales grew from Melbourne startups into publicly listed companies now worth billions of dollars. Culture Amp has established its global headquarters in Melbourne, while MYOB and Envato continue to scale their operations from the state. Melbourne accounts for 13% of global digital marketplace unicorns.

Talent and infrastructure for growth

Victoria is home to over 300,000 ICT professionals, accounting for approximately 30% of Australia’s national technology workforce. More than 12,000 software engineers work in Victoria, and the state has over a quarter of Australia’s software developers. Victoria’s education system produces more STEM graduates than any other Australian state or Singapore, creating a strong pipeline of technical talent.

Victorian digital technology businesses generated over $142 billion in revenue in FY24. The Victorian Government has committed $626 million to support emerging technologies and build digital skills, including funding for innovation hubs and the Cremorne digital precinct. Australia’s SaaS market is expected to grow 25% per annum over the next decade, reaching an estimated $57 billion by 2030.

Explore Enterprise Software in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

Enterprise software is one of Victoria’s top startup sectors

Melbourne accounts for 13% of global digital marketplace unicorns

Created 2,400+ jobs in Australia in 2024

$626 million government investment in digital

Agtech

Victoria is Australia’s largest producer of food and fibre products and home to 21,300 farm businesses, accounting for 25% of farm businesses in Australia. The state’s agtech sector is helping farmers improve productivity, sustainability and resilience. The total value of the agtech sector has grown more than 10 times since 2020, reaching $193 million.

Dedicated funding for agricultural innovation

The $2 million Hugh Victor McKay Fund, named after the Victorian inventor who patented the original combine harvester in the 1880s, invests up to $200,000 in early-stage agtech startups alongside private investors. Up to $30,000 of each investment is provided as a grant to the startup, with the remainder taken as equity. Every dollar of government funding is matched by at least two dollars of private investment, aiming to activate $6 million in total capital.

Farmers2Founders delivers a 12-week GROW pre-accelerator for agtech startups, backed by a $500,000 grant from LaunchVic and Agriculture Victoria. SproutX and RocketSeeder provide additional commercialisation support. Victoria’s SmartFarms and AgriBio research centres enable rapid technology development and testing. Founders are building solutions in livestock management, precision agriculture, energy innovation, food safety and climate resilience.

Explore Agtech in Dealroom Victoria

Key stats

$193 million agtech sector value (10x growth since 2020)

25% of Australia’s farm businesses (21,300 farms)

Australia’s largest producer of food and fibre products

$2 million Hugh Victor McKay Fund

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