- Home
- News
- Articles+
- Aerospace
- Artificial Intelligence
- Agriculture
- Alternate Dispute Resolution
- Arbitration & Mediation
- Banking and Finance
- Bankruptcy
- Book Review
- Bribery & Corruption
- Commercial Litigation
- Competition Law
- Conference Reports
- Consumer Products
- Contract
- Corporate Governance
- Corporate Law
- Covid-19
- Cryptocurrency
- Cybersecurity
- Data Protection
- Defence
- Digital Economy
- E-commerce
- Employment Law
- Energy and Natural Resources
- Entertainment and Sports Law
- Environmental Law
- Environmental, Social, and Governance
- Foreign Direct Investment
- Food and Beverage
- Gaming
- Health Care
- IBC Diaries
- In Focus
- Inclusion & Diversity
- Insurance Law
- Intellectual Property
- International Law
- IP & Tech Era
- Know the Law
- Labour Laws
- Law & Policy and Regulation
- Litigation
- Litigation Funding
- Manufacturing
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- NFTs
- Privacy
- Private Equity
- Project Finance
- Real Estate
- Risk and Compliance
- Student Corner
- Take On Board
- Tax
- Technology Media and Telecom
- Tributes
- Viewpoint
- Zoom In
- Law Firms
- In-House
- Rankings
- E-Magazine
- Legal Era TV
- Events
- Middle East
- Africa
- News
- Articles
- Aerospace
- Artificial Intelligence
- Agriculture
- Alternate Dispute Resolution
- Arbitration & Mediation
- Banking and Finance
- Bankruptcy
- Book Review
- Bribery & Corruption
- Commercial Litigation
- Competition Law
- Conference Reports
- Consumer Products
- Contract
- Corporate Governance
- Corporate Law
- Covid-19
- Cryptocurrency
- Cybersecurity
- Data Protection
- Defence
- Digital Economy
- E-commerce
- Employment Law
- Energy and Natural Resources
- Entertainment and Sports Law
- Environmental Law
- Environmental, Social, and Governance
- Foreign Direct Investment
- Food and Beverage
- Gaming
- Health Care
- IBC Diaries
- In Focus
- Inclusion & Diversity
- Insurance Law
- Intellectual Property
- International Law
- IP & Tech Era
- Know the Law
- Labour Laws
- Law & Policy and Regulation
- Litigation
- Litigation Funding
- Manufacturing
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- NFTs
- Privacy
- Private Equity
- Project Finance
- Real Estate
- Risk and Compliance
- Student Corner
- Take On Board
- Tax
- Technology Media and Telecom
- Tributes
- Viewpoint
- Zoom In
- Law Firms
- In-House
- Rankings
- E-Magazine
- Legal Era TV
- Events
- Middle East
- Africa
Presolv360 raises $4.7 million in Series A round
The proceeds will be pumped into market expansion and AI-driven product enhancements
Indian online dispute resolution (ODR) platform, Presolv360, has raised $4.7 million in a Series A round led by Elevation Capital, with participation from MGA Ventures and other high-profile firms.
As the company eyes global leadership in digital dispute resolution, the proceeds will be channelled into market expansion, artificial intelligence (AI)-driven product enhancements, and team growth
Founded in 2017 by Namita Shah, Bhaven Shah and Aman Sanghavi, Presolv360 was seeded in 2022 with a $1.08 million round anchored by MGA Ventures and Omidyar Network India, along with Inspira Enterprises, M Pallonji, Jeena and Co., Fine Fragrances and other angels.
The capital helped scale the product and build a 100+ enterprise client base. The platform was incubated by Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, giving it credibility in a conservative industry.
Since investor patience is the key in a sector where adoption cycles can be long, Presolv360 bolstered its credentials with an advisory board including former Chief Justices UU Lalit and B.N. Srikrishna.
Vaas Bhaskar, Partner at Elevation Capital, remarked, “Dispute resolution is a large and underpenetrated market ripe for tech-led disruption. Namita, Bhaven, and Aman have built a product that serves this market.”
The Series A comes amid a global surge in legal-tech capital flows. As per the industry trackers, $2.2 billion of venture funding went into it worldwide in 2024, with AI-enabled solutions drawing the bulk.
India’s legal-tech market remains small at an estimated $1.3 billion but is fast-growing. By mid-2025, startups in the segment raised $107 million. This was up sharply from the same period a year earlier.
Meanwhile, ODR is gaining traction against the backdrop of India’s judicial backlog. As of July 2025, courts across the country grappled with roughly 50.3 million pending cases - 0.6 million in district and subordinate courts, 6.3 million in high courts, and 87,000 in the Supreme Court.
The pendency has sharpened demand for faster, technology-enabled alternatives. Therefore, regulators and courts have begun empanelling ODR platforms, while enterprises adopt them to cut costs and resolution timelines. Analysts note that with government, corporate, and consumer disputes converging online, the country’s legal-tech market will expand rapidly.
Presolv360’s platform enables negotiation, mediation and arbitration through a digital interface designed for speed, scale and multilingual access.
The company has resolved over one million disputes, involving 2.5 million parties across 12,000 pin codes. Its clients include leading banks, NBFCs, e-commerce companies and startups, who report cost and time savings of up to 65 percent versus litigation. While adding to the institutional legitimacy, the platform is empanelled by courts and regulators.
Commenting on the move, Namita Shah, CEO of Presolv360, said, “Our vision extends beyond just resolving disputes. The opportunity lies in building end-to-end infrastructure by blending the latest technologies and human ingenuity.”
With fresh funds infused into it, Presolv360 signals rising investor confidence in India’s legal-tech ecosystem. For corporate leaders, the case backlog, regulatory push and digital adoption wave make ODR a strategic lever.



