Quantum computing has long felt like a technology perpetually five years away. But a monumental funding round out of the UK suggests the timeline is finally collapsing — and investors are placing enormous bets that the quantum era is arriving sooner than most expect.
Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC), a British scaleup that builds and deploys quantum computers, has raised a staggering $350 million in Series C funding. It’s the largest single funding round ever raised by a private quantum computing company in Europe, topping even the formidable sums flowing into the sector this year. The round was led by Bullhound Capital, with participation from the British Business Bank, European investors like Fynveur and Cofides, and US firms Alpha Edison and 18 West.
The raise marks the fourth mega-round ($100M+) for a European quantum company in 2026 alone — already surpassing the total for all of 2025. That’s not a coincidence. After years of being dismissed as a niche science project, quantum computing is entering a phase of genuine commercial maturation, and investors are racing to back the winners.
What OQC Actually Builds
OQC uses superconducting qubits — essentially electrons manipulated to serve as quantum bits — the same technical approach favored by IBM, Google, and Finland’s IQM (which is itself preparing a Nasdaq listing at a $1.8 billion valuation). But OQC’s real innovation may be less about the qubits themselves and more about how they’re delivered.
The company operates a “quantum-as-a-service” model, deploying its systems inside partner data centers like Equinix and Digital Realty. Customers don’t buy a quantum computer; they buy compute time on one. “It will sit alongside and be integrated with classical compute,” says CEO Gerald Mullally. “In the same way that you have CPUs and GPUs, we will see QPUs sitting on top of that.”
OQC has already deployed systems in data centers across London, Tokyo, and New York, with two more locations coming soon. It also has one system running directly on a customer’s premises at Spain’s CESGA supercomputing center. That kind of real-world deployment matters — it means companies in regulated sectors like finance and defense can test workloads on actual quantum hardware without shipping sensitive data anywhere.
Why This Matters for Startups
OQC’s current most advanced system runs 32 qubits. That’s nowhere near the millions needed for a fully fault-tolerant quantum computer. But here’s the thing: companies don’t need millions of qubits to start preparing. Financial institutions are already experimenting with quantum algorithms for portfolio optimization. Defense contractors are testing encryption-resistant approaches. Pharma companies are simulating molecular interactions that classical computers can’t handle.
The $350 million will go toward building OQC’s “next-generation system” — one that Mullally says “moves us into the commercial era of quantum.” The company is also expanding geographically and improving system capabilities.
For startup founders, the takeaway is twofold. First, the quantum computing supply chain is opening up fast. There are real opportunities in quantum software, algorithms, middleware, and integration layers — not just in building the hardware itself. Second, OQC’s “as-a-service” model is a playbook for any deep-tech startup facing the classical hardware adoption hurdle. Don’t try to sell expensive boxes. Sell outcomes. Sell access. Let customers graduate from experimentation to dependency on their own timeline.
The quantum race is no longer a distant future. It’s happening now, one multi-hundred-million-dollar round at a time.
Source: Sifted