Allium, a New York-based blockchain data infrastructure company, closed a $40 million Series B funding round today, the firm announced. The round brings Allium's total capital raised to roughly $61.5 million. Fortune first reported the news.
Who put money in
Amplify Partners led the round. Kleiner Perkins and Theory also participated. All three firms have a track record in infrastructure and enterprise software, though Allium didn't disclose valuation terms.
Why now
Institutional demand for onchain data is accelerating, and that's the tailwind Allium is riding. Banks, asset managers, and crypto-native firms alike need clean, reliable data from blockchain networks to build products, manage risk, and comply with regulations. Allium's infrastructure serves that need—providing normalized data across multiple chains.
The timing isn't accidental. More traditional financial players are dipping into digital assets, and they're finding that raw blockchain data is messy. Allium's product cleans and structures it, making it usable for analysts and automated systems.
What the raise means
With $61.5 million in the bank, Allium has room to scale its engineering team and expand coverage to more blockchains. The company didn't announce specific product updates today, but the funding gives it runway to chase the institutional pipeline that's clearly growing.
This isn't a small check for a data startup at this stage. The $40 million Series B signals that investors see a long-term market, not just a crypto cycle play.
Allium's raise fits a broader pattern this year: infrastructure companies attracting serious capital while flashier consumer apps struggle for attention. The logic is straightforward—if institutions are going to put real money into crypto, they need the plumbing to do it safely. Allium is a piece of that plumbing.
The company hasn't said what it will prioritize first, but the demand side is clear. The round closed on June 23, 2026, and Allium now has the resources to meet it.




