Israeli artificial intelligence startup Wonderful has closed a $150 million Series B round at a valuation of $2 billion, just thirteen months after the company was founded. The round was led by Insight Partners, with continued participation from Index Ventures, IVP, Bessemer Venture Partners, and Vine Ventures — a roster of top-tier international venture firms that reflects the level of confidence the market has developed in the company's trajectory.
The Series B follows a $100 million Series A that closed only four months prior, pushing Wonderful's total funding to $285 million before the company has reached its second birthday. The speed of the raise, and the valuations at which it has occurred, place Wonderful among the fastest-scaling enterprise software companies in Israeli startup history.
What Wonderful Builds
The company's product is an enterprise AI agent platform designed to deploy multilingual, voice and text-capable AI agents directly inside large organizations' customer service operations. The platform integrates with existing enterprise software stacks and is optimized for high-volume, regulated industries including telecommunications, financial services, healthcare, and manufacturing.
The agents don't just answer questions — they resolve problems, initiate transactions, and hand off to humans only when genuinely necessary. That's the standard we built toward, and it's why the numbers look the way they do.
Clients using the platform have reported handling time reductions of up to 60 percent and containment rates — the share of customer interactions successfully resolved without human escalation — above 80 percent. For large organizations running contact centers with thousands of agents, those figures translate to material cost savings and faster customer resolution times.
Rapid Headcount Growth
Wonderful currently employs around 300 people and has committed to growing that figure to 900 by the end of the year — a tripling of headcount in less than twelve months. The company is headquartered in both Tel Aviv and Amsterdam, with the dual presence reflecting its focus on both the Israeli talent base and the European enterprise market, which accounts for a significant portion of its current customer deployments.
The fresh capital will also fund expansion into more than 30 markets, with Southeast Asia and Latin America identified as near-term priorities. The company says its multilingual capability — agents can operate across dozens of languages with native-level fluency — is a key competitive differentiator in markets where English-only or limited-language solutions have struggled to gain adoption.