Dream has raised $260 million in new funding at a $3 billion valuation, giving the sovereign AI and cyber defense company fresh capital to expand its government-focused platforms across international markets.
The round was announced on June 18, 2026 and was co-led by Bicycle Capital and Group 11, with participation from Antler, Bain Capital Ventures, Tru Arrow Partners and other global investors. Dream said the financing follows almost $300 million in total contract value secured since the company began commercial operations in late 2024, underlining how quickly sovereign AI has moved from policy discussion to procurement priority.
Dream was founded in 2023 by Shalev Hulio, Sebastian Kurz and Gil Dolev. Hulio is Co-Founder and CEO, while Kurz, a former Chancellor of Austria, is President and Co-Founder. The company serves governments and critical infrastructure organizations across Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, with around 350 employees across Tel Aviv, Abu Dhabi and Vienna.
The company’s pitch sits at the intersection of national security, public-sector technology and AI infrastructure. Dream argues that governments increasingly need AI systems they can fully own, control and operate, rather than relying on external models and foreign-owned platforms for sensitive data, public services and critical infrastructure. That positioning gives the funding round a leadership angle beyond the valuation headline.
Dream has built three platforms around that thesis. Sphere is designed for national cyber defense and critical infrastructure protection. Hero acts as an autonomous AI security researcher that identifies vulnerabilities and attack paths. Atlas is the company’s sovereign AI platform, built to connect fragmented government data and deploy mission-specific AI agents inside secure, government-controlled environments.
The investor mix also gives the round clip value. Bicycle Capital and Group 11 co-led the financing, while Bain Capital Ventures, Antler and Tru Arrow Partners participated. That cast places Dream in a growing category of AI companies drawing capital because governments and infrastructure operators want systems that combine cyber resilience, data control and applied intelligence.
The funding comes as AI strategy is becoming a direct leadership question for governments and large organizations. Public agencies and regulated industries are under pressure to adopt AI without losing control over sensitive data, security architecture or decision-making systems. Dream’s $3 billion valuation suggests investors expect sovereign AI to develop into a durable enterprise and government technology category, not a short procurement cycle.
The commercial numbers are also notable. Dream says it has raised $412 million in total to build sovereign AI infrastructure and has secured almost $300 million in total contract value since late 2024. That combination of capital raised and contract momentum gives the company a stronger operating story than many AI firms still valued primarily on product promise.
The leadership test now shifts from fundraising to execution. Dream has to convert demand from governments and critical infrastructure operators into repeatable deployments across jurisdictions with different security rules, procurement processes and political priorities. Scaling a sovereign AI business will require trust, regulatory fluency and operational discipline as much as technical performance.
Dream’s funding round shows how AI infrastructure is becoming tied to national capability, cyber resilience and executive-level technology strategy. Organizations making long-term AI decisions will need to judge not only model quality, but ownership, data control, vendor dependence and the resilience of the systems sitting behind public and industrial operations.
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