Tech Nation closes after government withdraws funding

UK network for tech start-ups Tech Nation has announced it will cease operations after 10 years following the government’s withdrawal of core grant funding in favour of Barclays Bank.

The organisation, which will close its doors on 31 March 2023, said that without the funding its existing projects are not viable.

The network explained that the work it does with accelerator programmes, insights and research reports, visa processing for the Home Office, and research reports have all been built on funding from the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS).

Tech Nation, founded by the coalition government, said that as a non-profit organisation it cannot continue to serve scaleups without core public funding or based on commercial funding alone.

It is actively seeking interested parties to transfer its portfolio of assets to take forward in a new guise.

"By delivering services and insights impartially across Britain, Tech Nation has made a huge and positive impact on the UK’s digital economy," said Gerard Grech, founding chief executive. "The UK now boasts over 20 places with one tech unicorn or more, five times what it was in 2014."

The chief exec said that many of the UK's most successful tech companies, including Monzo, Deliveroo, Skyscanner, and Darktrace have passed through one or more of its growth programmes.

“I want to express my sincere thanks and gratitude to the Tech Nation team, to our ecosystem partners and all the inspirational innovators and entrepreneurs we have worked with along the way," he continued. "I am grateful to the government’s support over nine years, and feel proud of all we achieved."

    Share Story:

Recent Stories


Bringing Teams to the table – Adding value by integrating Microsoft Teams with business applications
A decade ago, the idea of digital collaboration started and ended with sending documents over email. Some organisations would have portals for sharing content or simplistic IM apps, but the ways that we communicated online were still largely primitive.

Automating CX: How are businesses using AI to meet customer expectations?
Virtual agents are set to supplant the traditional chatbot and their use cases are evolving at pace, with many organisations deploying new AI technologies to meet rising customer demand for self-service and real-time interactions.