Madrid-based Xoople has closed a €112.6 mn Series B round, or about $130 mn, lifting total funding to €195 mn, or roughly $225 mn.
Backers in the round included Nazca Capital, MCH, CDTI, Buenavista Equity Partners, and Endeavor Catalyst. The company said the raise puts it ahead of peers in its category by funding scale.
Xoople is building what it calls a global record system for physical change on Earth. Chief executive officer Fabrizio Pirondini said each major computing cycle creates its own system of record, and the companies defining it tend to become central players in that era. He said CRMs did this for customer data, while cloud platforms did it for software and digital infrastructure.
CRMs gave companies a system of record for customers. Cloud platforms create systems of record for software and data. We are building the system of record for the physical world in the AI era with Xoople.
Fabrizio Pirondini, CEO of Xoople
“After seven years developing our system in stealth, we are incredibly excited to begin commercialisation in Q2 and start scaling up that capability in the market,” said Fabrizio Pirondini.
Xoople, he argued, is building that same layer for the physical world in the AI era. After seven years in stealth, the company is now preparing to begin commercialisation in the second quarter and expand that capability in the market.
Founded in 2019, Xoople emerged from stealth in May 2025. The company is focused on giving organisations access to real-time intelligence tied to physical-world change, with the aim of supporting the next wave of AI systems.
Its platform is built around a proprietary end-to-end chain that produces verifiable time-series measurements of the Earth and connects that data with major cloud and data platforms.
The company’s argument is pretty direct. As AI shifts from analysis into autonomous action through agentic workflows, demand for reliable ground-truth data from the physical world is likely to rise fast.
Xoople says that data will matter across supply chain optimisation, infrastructure management, risk underwriting, disaster response, and geopolitical or security monitoring.
As AI models become easier to replicate, Xoople sees proprietary datasets linking digital systems to real-world conditions as a growing source of advantage.
The company refers to this infrastructure and data layer as Earth’s System of Record. In its view, that layer gives AI something many systems still lack: a real-time understanding of physical reality.
Xoople says it is turning Earth into a continuously measured, AI-ready data layer connecting models, software, and agents directly to what is happening on the ground.
Its private preview customer base already includes government agencies and Fortune 500 companies using the platform for supply chain optimisation, infrastructure monitoring, agricultural forecasting, resource planning, insurance risk modelling, disaster response, urban planning, infrastructure resilience, and scenario forecasting.









