The Rise of AI in VC Funding: How Crypto Firms Are Evolving

In 2025, nearly half of every venture capital dollar invested in crypto companies went towards firms that integrated artificial intelligence and crypto, marking a significant increase from the previous year. According to Binance Research, "AI is becoming an integral part of crypto's product and infrastructure stack, rather than a parallel narrative." This shift is evident in the transition from AI "co-pilots" that assist users in analyzing information to AI "agents" that can monitor conditions and execute actions autonomously. The ability to reduce the gap between insight and execution can significantly impact behavior, particularly in trading environments where timing is crucial. The surge in AI spending is part of a broader trend, with Crunchbase data indicating that AI companies raised approximately $242 billion in the first quarter of 2026, accounting for roughly 80% of global venture funding. Gartner estimates that total AI spending will reach $2.52 trillion by the end of the year. The crypto industry is at the forefront of this trend, with crypto platforms deploying AI systems faster than traditional finance due to the support of always-on markets and programmable infrastructure. For instance, on Binance's AI Pro beta, nearly half of the activity was triggered by the system rather than users, demonstrating the growing use of AI tools that operate in the background without prompts. The adoption of AI solutions varies across exchanges and brokers, with risk management, market signals, and fraud detection being widely used, while user-facing tools such as copy trading, chatbots, and portfolio advisors are present in only 47% to 71% of them. Several major platforms have introduced agentic products this year, bringing AI closer to monitoring and execution within set parameters, thereby compressing the value chain between identifying an opportunity and acting on it. As a result, the competitive landscape is expected to shift from who's integrating AI features to who's owning users' decision-making loops.