Venture capital lifts Catalan life sciences
Investment funds, start-ups and research centres celebrate the "maturation" of the ecosystem after a record 2025 of investments
BarcelonaWhen Valerie Vanhooren left Belgium for Barcelona, she found everything to be countryside. The founder and CEO ofOna Therapeutics, one of the start-ups biotechnology companies most valued in the Catalan ecosystem, remembers its first landing in the State that "there was very little". A decade ago, Catalonia had an emerging network in the life sciences sector "unprofessional, with little money and little foreign talent". More than 10 years later, the Principality has broken its investment record in health companies, with 517 million euros in 2025, according to data from the Bioregion report prepared by Biocat; with venture capital as the main protagonist, after having dedicated 327 million euros to finance new projects. Research centers, entrepreneurs and investment funds recognize that there are still shortcomings compared to other European regions, but the industry's engine has already more than revved up. "Now we can compete," concludes Vanhooren, in conversation with ARA.
And, precisely, she was one of the first start-ups biotechnological ones in raising a round of a certain volume: in 2020, the company dedicated to developing treatments against cancer and metastasis received 30 million euros in a Series A led by a local fund, Asabys Partners. "It was an investment like few had been seen, the largest Series A in Spain," recalls Cristina Horcajada, head of innovation at the Barcelona Biomedical Research Institute. Now, a movement of this volume is part of normality in the sector. The same startup closed a Series B of 74 million euros in May. And even more so: last year, the start-up of genetic medicines SpliceBio broke all records with a round of 119 million euros.
Asabys' partner, Sylvain Sachot, is clear that the market increasingly demands the kind of solutions generated by biotech Catalans: "there are huge unmet medical needs, and the industry has a critical need to innovate to continue growing." In fact, according to industry sources consulted, 2026 "looks very good" to break last year's investment record again. In the words of BStartup's investment director, Laurent Arens, the Barcelona business fabric is "far from hitting a ceiling." "We will see high-level rounds more regularly, and we are already doing some things better than the rest of Europe," he argues.
More muscle for capital
Several sectoral voices agree that venture capital struck the first spark. According to the director of the Barcelona Science Park, Maria Terrades, the advent of investment funds specialized in biotechnology and health has "played a very important role" in the escalation of recent years. Life sciences is a sector in which "not just anyone can invest". "It's very risky, and requires great technical knowledge," observes the executive. In this sense, accelerators like Asabys itself, or Ysios, "have helped to greatly professionalize projects". Joël Jean-Mairet, managing partner at Ysios, emphasizes the importance of specialized venture capital in transforming research, both basic and applied, into products that can reach the patient. "The pending issue has always been transfer, and here capital is extremely important: you have to speak the language of scientists, and help them plan," he reasons.
From the sector, however, they point out that volumes have not yet reached the level of neighboring countries with technological environments "at a higher level of maturity". Large Spanish venture capital funds operate between 100 and 200 million euros. Looking towards Europe, the sector's record is held by the French Jeito Capital, which closed a 1 billion euro fund in April dedicated to therapeutic innovations; and it has about 1.6 billion in assets under management. In parallel, others like Sofinnova or Medicxi have recently raised funds of 650 and 500 million, respectively. Beyond capital, the executive director of SpliceBio, Miquel Vila-Perelló, sees reputational advantages in an investment structure of this caliber: "a 1 billion fund does not just bring money, but also a multitude of contacts. It would be very helpful to have one".
Despite this, the ecosystem players see a collective path to compete internationally. First, from home: "before, funds invested alone, in smaller things; but now they co-invest and see new strengths," reflects Terrades. Furthermore, Vanhooren indicates that Barcelona-based funds are "well connected internationally," and are capable of attracting leaders for rounds from outside the State. SpliceBio's Series B, in fact, was co-led by Sanofi Ventures and EQT Life Sciences; while at the helm of Ona's also appeared the French firm Mérieux Equity. Sachot attributes the merit of this attractiveness beyond Spanish borders to the projects of local technological entrepreneurs: "Capital does not arrive by chance, it arrives when the most demanding investors in the world decide to invest here. It shows that the potential of companies is very great."
"More success stories"
Abundant rounds are accumulating in recent years in Barcelona. The healthtech Inbrain Neuroelectronics announced this year that it is opening a 100 million euro round that it expects to close during the year; and the country's main research centers assure, without specifying names, that there are spin-off companies working on significant amounts to accelerate their funding. Vila-Perelló maintains, however, that Barcelona is at "the beginning of the wheel" of investor success. Very significant funding volumes are being achieved; but "in Boston, Series B of 120 million are seen every week." "It's part of the cycle: there need to be more investment opportunities, and projects that need more capital," opines the entrepreneur.
According to Vanhooren, the country needs economic victories to reach the next level, also in terms of fund volume. "We need there to be good exits, or good licensing agreements" that leave money in the coffers of the venture capital that has invested in local start-ups. For Joël Jean-Mairet, the same growth rate of the sector brings more "liquidity events" like these closer: companies are advancing in their clinical studies, and are approaching the leap to the market; or being acquired by established pharmaceutical companies that "seek to acquire assets without the initial risk." Thus, recalls Vila-Perelló, is how other ecosystems have grown. "In the US, or in Benelux, this cycle has been repeated many times. Here, we are starting it," he indicates. Sales and licenses, moreover, activate more intense investor cycles, because venture capital sees returns and has room to dedicate more capital.