Arcade.dev has raised $60 million in a Series A funding round to expand its secure action layer for artificial intelligence agents in production, designed to prove which agents performed which actions on behalf of which users.
The company will use the new funding for product development, ecosystem growth and hiring to support enterprise AI deployments that scale from pilot to production workflows, it said in a press release Monday (June 15).
“Just because the model is wrong doesn’t mean the agent will fail in production,” Arcade.dev co-founder and CEO Alex Salazar said in a release. “For a given action by an agent, it fails because no one can prove whether that agent can perform that action on that resource on behalf of that user. That’s what we built.”
Arcade’s secure action layer provides authorization to ensure that agents only have the access a user has for the action they are performing. Reliability provided by tools built for how agents are used. Governance that maintains a complete audit trail of all actions, according to the release.
The company’s Series A funding round follows a $12 million seed round in 2025. This brings the company’s total funding to $72 million.
The latest round was led by SYN Ventures with strategic investments from Morgan Stanley and Wipro, according to a release.
Advertisement: SCROLL TO CONTINUE
Jay Leek, managing partner at SYN Ventures and board member at Arcade, said in a release that the agent is now beyond deploying infrastructure to ensure the technology is secure.
“Arcade is the only company we’ve ever seen that was built for production from day one, which is why every full-scale enterprise agent deployment goes through Arcade,” says Leek.
Salazar said in a blog post on Friday (June 12) that every company is grappling with how to force agents to act internally without losing control of their actions.
“The answer is now clear. We can get a two-year head start as everyone starts to realize how big it is,” Salazar said. “We’re not slowing down. $60 million is about accelerating. More tools, deeper governance, broader reach, and faster, more powerful releases that no one can keep up with.”
