
Kargo, a San Francisco-based startup automating warehouse loading docks with artificial intelligence (AI) cameras, has raised $42 million in a Series B funding round led by growth equity firm Avenir Growth.
The funding round also had participation from Linse Capital, Hearst Ventures, and Lightbank, which brings Kargo’s total funding to more than $75 million since its founding in 2019.
More importantly, the funding arrives on the heels of Kargo’s explosive traction that has transformed the company from operating with three enterprise customers at its Series A in 2022 to serving more than 45 Fortune 500 companies, with more than 1,000 AI-powered towers already deployed across warehouse loading docks nationwide.
The capital deployment also comes as the global AI warehousing market expands at a compound annual growth rate of 26.1%, with a projection to grow from $11.22 billion in 2024 and reach $45.12 billion by end of decade. This stands as a market expansion that promises substantial growth for Kargo’s continued scaling.
As such, the company will use this fresh funding to expand deployments of its AI-powered towers globally and develop Kargo Intelligence, an agentic AI platform for back-office supply chain tasks like invoicing and claims disputes.
Kargo’s business model and technological innovation
Kargo operates at a critical point in global supply chains which is the warehouse loading dock. Rather than pursuing robotics-based physical automation like competitors such as GreyOrange, Geek+, or Amazon Robotics, the company has built a software-hardware hybrid platform that bridges the gap between the physical world of freight movement and digital inventory systems.
The core offering of the logistics company’s business model comprises two integrated components – Kargo Towers and Kargo Lifts.
Kargo Towers are physical sensor installations at loading dock doors and facility gateways that employ computer vision equipped with specialized AI capabilities to capture real-time visual data of all incoming and outgoing freight.
These are then complemented by Kargo Lifts, which are purpose-built systems for forklifts and autonomous guided vehicles (AGVs) that extend the company’s vision capabilities beyond the dock into movement operations.
The software powering these core offerings employ large language models (LLMs) to enable the structuring of visual data into straightforward inventory intelligence. For instance, when a truck arrives at a dock, Kargo’s system automatically inspects the freight for damage, goes ahead to verify shipment contents against Bills of Lading, flags discrepancies such as overages and shortages, and then pushes verified inventory data directly into customer warehouse management systems.
This technology addresses a very difficult segment of supply chain operations, as loading docks have formally been riddled with manual verification creating information gaps, freight claim disputes, and operational inefficiency.
Kargo’s Kargo Intelligence: Agentic AI for Back-Office automation
The Series B capital will support the development of Kargo Intelligence, an agentic AI platform that is designed to automate back-office workflows that have historically consumed substantial manual labor.
More importantly, Kargo Intelligence will leverage the proprietary visual data captured at docks to drive intelligent automation for invoicing, claims dispute resolution, financial reconciliation, and customer service operations.
Also, Kargo’s move toward adopting agentic AI reflects the broader industry trend of adopting autonomous systems that perform structured workflows independently as opposed to merely surfacing information for human review. “
“The dramatic growth we’ve experienced reflects the powerful network effect of the Kargo solution,” said Sam Lurye, founder and CEO of Kargo. “Once Kargo sensors are deployed in a warehouse, customers want Kargo upstream and downstream in their supply chain.”
