Transit Software Company Via Files Confidentially For US IPO

by | Jul 16, 2025 | Market Analysis & Trends | 0 comments

Via, a transit software company, has filed confidentially for an initial public offering in the U.S., it said on Wednesday.

The company aims to help cities and agencies better traverse the changing world of transportation. Specifically, its software provides insights backed by data so transit systems can be optimized even as riders continue to change the way they travel.

The company’s TransitTech products are used by several hundred communities around the globe.

Founded in 2012, New York-based Via has raised nearly $890 million in funding, per Crunchbase data. Its last known raise was a $110 million round in February 2023 that valued the company at just over $3.5 billion. Investors include 83North, Exor, Pitango VC, Planven Entrepreneur Ventures, Janus Henderson Investors, CF Private Equity, RiverPark Ventures and Ion Crossover Partners.

Via ended 2022 with an annualized revenue run rate of over $200 million, more than doubling since its previous financing round — a $130 million Series G in November 2021. Its revenue is today believed to be in the several hundred million dollars range.

It’s not the first time Via filed to go public. In December 2021, the company had also filed confidentially for an IPO before later withdrawing those plans due to economic conditions.

Related reading:

Illustration: Dom Guzman


Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the
Crunchbase Daily.

Related Posts

Cybersecurity Funding Surged Higher In Q2

Cybersecurity Funding Surged Higher In Q2

Cybersecurity was a hot area for venture investment in the first half of 2025, with total funding to the space hitting its highest level in three years. Overall, investors poured $9.4 billion into global cybersecurity- and privacy-focused startups in the first six...

Why Founders Should Skip VCs And Go Straight To LPs

Why Founders Should Skip VCs And Go Straight To LPs

By Hebron Sher For years, startup founders have treated venture capital like a rite of passage — raise a round, land some splashy headlines, grow fast or die trying. But that playbook is worn out. And it doesn’t work for every company. The VC model was built to swing...

0 Comments

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *