• Snabbit, an on-demand home services startup, secures $19 million just four months after its $5.5 million Series A.
  • Snabbit will scale operations across India, aiming to build the country’s first full-stack operating system for fast home services.

Lightspeed is leading a $19 million fundraising round for Snabbit, a company that provides on-demand home services. Current investors Elevation Capital and Nexus Venture Partners also participated in the round.

The new funding round follows Snabbit's $5.5 million Series A financing by just four months. After Slikk, the Mumbai-based startup has already closed two investment rounds in 2025, making it the second company to do so. Notably, both businesses share investors in Lightspeed and Nexus Venture Partners.

Over the following nine months, Snabbit intends to penetrate more than 200 micromarkets and broaden its presence throughout important Indian cities with the help of the additional funds.

With the use of technology, dependability, and a network of skilled experts, the company is putting itself in a position to create what it claims to be India's first full operating system for quick home services.

'At Snabbit, we’re leading the biggest disruption in Indian consumer internet today, fundamentally changing how households access regular services,’ said Aayush Agarwal, founder and chief executive officer of Snabbit.

Over 600 professionals are presently using Snabbit's platform, and the number is rising every month, according to Agarwal. Additionally, he pointed out that experts can make a lot more money on the site than they might through more conventional offline means.

According to Lightspeed partner Rahul Taneja, Snabbit is revolutionizing home services in India by introducing speed, structure, and trust to an industry that has up to now mostly functioned informally.

Snabbit was founded in 2024 by Aayush Agarwal and matches households with qualified professionals for on-demand domestic chores. For jobs like cleaning, dishwashing, and laundry, professionals can be scheduled by the hour and arrive in as little as 15 minutes.


Edited by Harshajit Sarmah