Oxa Locks Down Series D to Scale Self-Driving Software
UK autonomy startup Oxa secures Series D funding to commercialize its industrial self-driving platform across 20+ vehicle types.
Oxa just closed its Series D round, pushing its configurable autonomous driving software closer to widespread industrial deployment. The company isn't chasing robotaxis — it's going after the unglamorous but massive industrial mobility market.
The core pitch: one self-driving software stack flexible enough to run on more than 20 different vehicle types. That's a wide net, covering everything from warehouse movers to industrial transport.
Rather than building its own vehicles, Oxa is betting on being the autonomy layer that existing manufacturers bolt onto their hardware. It's a platform play, and the Series D cash should help them scale commercial deployments.
The industrial automation space is heating up fast, with companies racing to prove autonomous tech works outside controlled environments. Oxa's vehicle-agnostic approach could give it an edge — or spread it thin. The market will decide.