Peak XV leads Rs 72 Cr round in quick commerce platform BazaarNow
BazaarNow, a quick commerce platform tailored for India’s smaller cities, has raised Rs 72 crore (approximately $7.8 million) in a round led by Peak XV Partners. The round also saw participation from Whiteboard Capital and Antler, alongside a group of angel investors including Vidit Aatrey, Karthik Gurumurthy, Prashant Sachan, Arjun Purkayastha, Nitin Saluja, Siddharth Gadia, Ayyappan R, and Aravind Charanyan. With this raise, the company’s total funding stands at Rs 80 crore, including its pre-seed round.
Launched in January by founders Priyanshu Jain, Arjun Harish, and Tarithnay Mandal, the Bengaluru-based startup focuses on everyday groceries, fruits and vegetables, daily essentials, local brands, and regional assortments for middle-class households across India’s tier II and tier III markets.
Local-first design for smaller cities
BazaarNow’s platform is built around a vernacular-first app experience and AI-powered local-language search, aiming to make digital grocery shopping intuitive for users more comfortable in regional languages. The startup also offers assisted shopping, including call-to-order support, to mirror familiar offline buying habits and reduce friction for first-time or less tech-savvy customers.
Operationally, BazaarNow runs an in-house logistics stack designed for the realities of smaller Indian markets. Its assortment strategy emphasizes local and regional brands, fresh produce, simple ordering, and transparent pricing—avoiding complex discounts, coupon-hunting, or wallet dependencies that can complicate purchases.
Supply chain built for freshness and speed
The company is building its supply chain around faster inventory turnover, especially in fruits and vegetables, to improve freshness and reliability. By prioritizing speed and tight replenishment cycles, BazaarNow aims to maintain consistent quality while keeping operations efficient in fragmented regional markets.
Early traction
In its first pilot city, BazaarNow reports scaling to more than 1,800 orders per day per store. The company says this early performance validates demand for localized assortments, repeat grocery behavior, and efficient fulfillment tailored to smaller city clusters.
What’s next
Over the next 6 to 12 months, BazaarNow plans to:
- Expand into surrounding towns and nearby dense clusters
- Deepen its assortment across groceries and daily essentials
- Strengthen its supply chain and inventory turnover, particularly in fresh categories
- Further enhance its local-language experience and habit-led product features
With its latest funding, BazaarNow intends to accelerate this roadmap and double down on a local-first, simplicity-driven model for quick commerce across India’s emerging cities.