The Oratomic Series A funding round of $300 million is built on a single audacious claim: that a genuinely useful quantum computer needs far fewer qubits than the field has long assumed, and that a Pasadena startup founded by Caltech physicists has the science to prove it.
The round was co-led by ARCH Venture Partners, Spark Capital, and Khosla Ventures. Bezos Expeditions, Index Ventures, General Catalyst, Lowercarbon Capital, and Bain Capital also participated, alongside Formation 8, Nebular, quantum computing researchers David and Scott Aaronson, and a roster of others that stretches to include Infleqtion, Genius Ventures, and Global Frontier Investments, according to Quantum Zeitgeist.
Khosla Ventures founder Vinod Khosla was candid about the size of the bet, writing on X that it was his firm’s ‘largest initial investment yet.’
The Qubit Threshold That Changes the Calculus
For years, building a fault-tolerant quantum computer was assumed to require roughly 1 million qubits. Research published on 31 March 2026 by Caltech’s Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, co-authored by Oratomic researchers including Madelyn Cain, Qian Xu, and Robbie King, overturned that assumption. The paper showed that Shor’s algorithm, a cryptographically consequential computation that can factor large numbers to break encryption keys, could run on as few as 10,000 reconfigurable atomic qubits.
Caltech’s news office reported that the results indicate a fully realised quantum computer could be built with 10,000 to 20,000 qubits, making the technology theoretically operational by the end of the decade.
Co-founder and chief executive Dolev Bluvstein described the shift in his team’s thinking plainly. ‘You would have not previously been able to convince any of us to start a quantum computing company, because we just thought it was way too far away,’ he said. ‘Only when we made this recent breakthrough did we simultaneously all change our minds.’
The architecture underpinning that breakthrough is what the Quantum Computing Report describes as reconfigurable neutral-atom arrays: individual neutral atoms suspended in space inside arrays of focused laser beams, functioning as optical tweezers. Unlike superconducting loops or trapped-ion systems, which rely on permanent, lithographed physical connections, Oratomic’s atoms can be repositioned dynamically. The company describes its hardware and software layers as engineered for active topological error correction.
Oratomic Series A Funding and the No-NISQ Commitment
Oratomic is explicit about what it will not do on the way to that goal. The company states it is ‘not pursuing intermediate products or commercial systems along the way,’ with its sole operational mandate being the direct delivery of a fault-tolerant machine. Noisy intermediate-scale quantum systems, known as NISQ devices, the kind most competitors are currently offering to research scientists and corporations, are not part of the plan.
Bluvstein pushed back on comparisons to PsiQuantum, the photonics-based startup valued at $7 billion last September, which is similarly skipping the NISQ stage but aims for a million-qubit system by the end of next year. His argument is one of scale and cost: ‘The difference is that we need roughly 10,000 to 20,000 qubits to build a useful computer, and we have already experimentally demonstrated all of the core components required of that computer at a slightly smaller scale.’
FinSMEs reports that Oratomic intends to deploy the $300 million across high-performance quantum hardware fabrication, algorithmic research into fault-tolerant logical qubit topologies, and an aggressive expansion of its physics and hardware engineering teams.
The applications the company is targeting are not abstract. Bluvstein has pointed to cracking complex encryptions via Shor’s algorithm as a concrete use case, alongside broader breakthroughs in biotech, chemistry, logistics, and artificial intelligence, fields where the combinatorial complexity of problems currently defeats classical machines.
The wider sector is drawing capital at pace. Infleqtion and Quantinuum have gone public this year, and shares in listed players such as Rigetti and IonQ have surged over the past 18 months. Oratomic, for now, remains private and unbothered by intermediate milestones. The end-of-decade deadline is the only one that counts.
