What’s Happening
Venturi Partners — a Singapore-based investor focused on consumer businesses — is reportedly negotiating to lead a fresh funding round for Supertails, aiming to raise $15–20 million. The Economic Times+1
Contents
If the deal goes through, it marks a significant bet on India’s rapidly growing pet-care market at a time when demand for pet products, services and convenience is surging. The Economic Times+1
Who Is Supertails — And What Makes It Stand Out
- Founded in 2021 by former executives of a well-known meat-delivery startup, Supertails set out to build a full-stack pet-care platform. The Economic Times+1
- Unlike a simple online store, Supertails combines pet supplies, premium food, accessories, pet pharmaceuticals, grooming, training, and online vet consultations under one roof — appealing to pet owners looking for convenience and trust. The Economic Times+2Indian Startup News+2
- It has already raised capital before (notably a $15 million round in early 2024 led by RPSG Capital Ventures) to support offline expansion, build its healthcare services and scale supply-chain, showing it has serious ambitions to capture large market share. The Economic Times+2Indian Startup Times+2
- Supertails has been expanding its offline presence — launching pet clinics and pharmacies — while keeping its online/mobile platform as the backbone. ETRetail.com+1
Why the Timing Makes Sense: Pet-Care Market Momentum
- The broader Indian pet-care market is currently valued at around US$3.5 billion, with projections to double to about US$7 billion by 2028 — a fast-growing segment reflecting rising pet adoption and “pet parenthood” trends. The Economic Times+2The Economic Times+2
- Increasing disposable incomes, lifestyle changes post-COVID, and demand for premium pet care are pushing more people toward platforms that offer convenience, variety, and trust — exactly the value Supertails aims to deliver. The Economic Times+2mint+2
- With big players and FMCG companies (or those entering pet-food/consumer goods) starting to eye the segment, early-mover full-stack players like Supertails could benefit from first-mover advantage. The Economic Times+1
What This Funding Could Enable — Strategic Opportunities Ahead
- More product diversification: expanding private-label products, premium food, grooming kits, health supplements, etc.
- Expanding offline footprint — more clinics, pet-care centers, physical retail stores across cities beyond current reach.
- Enhancing pet healthcare services: better vet-consultation infrastructure (online + offline), specialized clinics, pet pharmacies.
- Investment in technology and logistics: smoother supply-chains, faster delivery, better customer experience, perhaps subscription models for repeat pet-parents.
- Aggressive market penetration and customer acquisition, riding rising pet adoption and premiumisation trends.
10-Question FAQ
- What exactly is Supertails?
Supertails is an India-based pet-care startup offering a full suite of services — from pet supplies (food, toys, accessories) to healthcare (vet consultations, pet pharmacy), grooming, training, and lifestyle products — aiming to be a one-stop “pet super app.” The Economic Times+2ETRetail.com+2 - Who founded Supertails and when?
It was founded in 2021 by former executives of a meat-delivery startup: Varun Sadana, Aman Tekriwal and Vineet Khanna. The Economic Times+1 - How much has Supertails raised so far?
Before this potential round, Supertails had raised about $26 million in total, including a $15 million Series B led by RPSG Capital Ventures in 2024. The Economic Times+2The Economic Times+2 - What is the new funding round about?
The startup is in talks to raise $15–20 million, led by Venturi Partners, to expand operations, scale supply-chain and product offerings, increase offline footprint, and strengthen pet-healthcare services. The Economic Times+1 - Why are investors interested in pet-care startups like Supertails now?
Because the pet-care market in India is growing rapidly — pet adoption is rising, consumer interest in premium pet products/services is increasing, and the segment is transitioning from basic needs to lifestyle and pet-parenting economy. The Economic Times+2NewsPoint+2 - What challenges does Supertails face?
Even with growth, pet-care is fragmented. Challenges include scaling logistics across many pin codes, profitability pressure (evident losses in recent years), high customer-acquisition costs, and competition as larger players enter the segment. The Economic Times+2The Economic Times+2 - Is offline expansion part of Supertails’ plan?
Yes — the company has already launched pet-care clinics and pet-healthcare services offline. It aims to open multiple centers and stores across cities to complement its online presence. ETRetail.com+2The Economic Times+2 - How big is the target market for pet-care in India?
Estimates suggest that India’s pet-care market could double from around US$3.5 billion currently to roughly US$7 billion by 2028, driven by rising pet ownership, premiumisation, and increasing demand for comprehensive pet services. The Economic Times+2The Economic Times+2 - What’s Supertails’ revenue situation and growth prospects?
According to insiders, Supertails is currently clocking an annualised run-rate revenue (ARR) in the region of several hundred crores of rupees. However, the company still reports net losses — highlighting that growth plans will need to balance scale with cost control. The Economic Times+2ETRetail.com+2 - What could this funding mean for pet owners and the pet-care industry?
If Supertails expands successfully, pet owners in more cities could get easier access to quality pet-food, grooming, vet consultations and pharmacy services — making pet-care more organized, reliable, and accessible. For the industry, this could accelerate consolidation, better supply-chains, and more structured pet-care ecosystem.





