Real estate startup Landeed, a property title search engine, plans to invest around Rs 30 crore this fiscal to expand its business.
The Landeed platform is used by banks, developers, legal professionals, and property stakeholders to enable faster, more structured due diligence and decision-making. The company has so far raised around Rs 100 crore from investors, including Y Combinator, Draper Associates and Bayhouse Capital, PTI reported.
“We will be investing around Rs 30 crore this fiscal year towards growth,” Landeed Founder & CEO Sanjay Mandava said.
“A significant part of this investment will go into expanding our GPU (graphics processing unit) infrastructure and hardware, scaling from our first small language model into a broader family of specialized models, and advancing Indic OCR and document intelligence for Indian property records,” he said.
Mandava said the company is also investing in deeper state coverage, fulfilment infrastructure, product development, and customer acquisition.
The company charges fees from its clients, but the founder did not disclose the revenue number for the 2025-26 fiscal.
Recently, Landeed introduced ‘Terra ‘, which is an AI-powered property intelligence layer that converts India’s fragmented land and property records into structured, decision-ready intelligence.
“India does not have a property data problem. It has a property intelligence problem. The records exist, but they are scattered across states, formats, languages, and systems,” the CEO said.
The new tech solution ‘Terra’, which is built on more than 773 million land and property records across 26 states and 4 union territories, can read, connect, and reason across primary records so banks, developers, lawyers, brokers, investors, and owners can make better decisions in seconds instead of days, Mandava said.
“Property risk in India often comes from the gap between what people say about a property and what the records actually show. The truth is usually sitting inside a sub-registrar’s office, a revenue record, a court filing, or a municipal system,” he observed.
Mandava said the company is making efforts to solve this problem for their clients.











