Enterprise search and analytics company Elastic has agreed to acquire DeductiveAI, a startup that uses artificial intelligence to automatically detect and resolve software bugs, in a deal valued at up to $85 million, according to sources familiar with the transaction.
Founded in 2023 and emerging from stealth just last November, DeductiveAI raised a $7.5 million seed round led by CRV with participation from Databricks Ventures, Thomvest Ventures, and PrimeSet. The startup was valued at $33 million at the time of its seed round, making this exit a solid return for early investors in under two years.
DeductiveAI operates in the fast-growing field of AI-powered site reliability engineering (AI SRE). As organizations churn out increasingly large volumes of AI-generated code, the need for automated debugging and incident resolution has become critical. DeductiveAI’s AI agents can cut incident resolution time by up to 90%, freeing human SREs to focus on product development rather than constantly fighting fires.
The technology will plug directly into Elastic’s observability platform, which helps engineers monitor software systems and detect security threats. By integrating DeductiveAI’s autonomous debugging capabilities, Elastic aims to offer customers tools that can automatically monitor performance and resolve system failures in real time — a significant step beyond traditional monitoring dashboards.
The acquisition reflects a broader industry trend: established tech incumbents are aggressively buying AI-native startups to embed agentic capabilities into their existing products rather than building from scratch. Elastic, which went public in 2018 and is best known for Elasticsearch, is joining a wave of enterprise software companies making similar moves.
DeductiveAI was co-founded by Rakesh Kothari, formerly VP of engineering at ThoughtSpot, and Sameer Agarwal, a former founding engineer at Databricks who also worked at Apache Software Foundation and Meta. Despite reaching roughly $1 million in annual recurring revenue, the startup faced stiff competition from Resolve AI, a Greylock and Lightspeed-backed competitor valued at $1.5 billion.
The speedy exit underscores how quickly M&A is moving in the AI infrastructure space, particularly for startups that can demonstrate enterprise-ready technology and strong founding teams.
Source: TechCrunch