How Two Engineers Built Sarvam AI from an Idea to a Summit Showcase
At the India AI Impact Summit 2026, held at Bharat Mandapam, one young startup captured national attention Sarvam AI. Less than three years old, the Bengaluru-based company showcased its made-in-India large language models (LLMs) and AI-powered hardware, including the sleek Sarvam Kaze spectacles worn by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the summit. While the summit moment went viral, Sarvam AI’s rise was not accidental. It was the result of years of groundwork by two engineers determined to build sovereign AI systems tailored to India’s languages, culture, and real-world needs.
Founded in 2023 and headquartered in Bengaluru, Sarvam AI was among 12 organisations selected by the Indian government to develop AI models trained on Indian datasets.
Its mission “AI for all from India” focused on,
Unlike many global AI systems trained predominantly on Western data, Sarvam AI concentrated on Indic languages and local contexts, addressing a gap often overlooked by large international labs.
Sarvam AI was founded by Pratyush Kumar and Vivek Raghavan, both with strong academic and professional backgrounds.
In 2007, he returned to India and shifted toward public digital infrastructure and language technology.
Raghavan’s experience deeply influenced Sarvam’s direction.
He served at the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) as chief product manager and biometric architect, contributing to the scaling of the Aadhaar platform from its first enrolment to the billionth.
He also,
His association with AI4Bharat further reinforced the goal of building English-equivalent AI capabilities in Indian languages.
Sarvam AI moved swiftly after incorporation.
In December 2023, it raised $41 million in a Series A round led by Lightspeed, with participation from Peak XV Partners and Khosla Ventures.
Key milestones followed,
By early 2026, the company claimed benchmark results outperforming ChatGPT and Gemini in specific areas such as Indic OCR and document layout understanding.
The India AI Impact Summit 2026 became Sarvam AI’s biggest public stage.
Beyond the much-discussed Sarvam Kaze AI glasses, the company unveiled 11 AI platforms in the weeks leading up to the event.
Key Offerings
Pratyush Kumar emphasised the need to move “beyond English in AI”, arguing that user experiences vary widely across regions and that AI benchmarks must reflect cultural and contextual realities.
Sarvam AI represents a broader shift in India’s technology ambitions.
1. Digital Sovereignty
India aims to reduce reliance on foreign AI models and build domestic foundational capabilities.
2. Linguistic Inclusion
With 22 scheduled languages and hundreds of dialects, AI systems must handle multilingual and non-Latin scripts effectively.
3. Public Sector Integration
Deployments with UIDAI and other institutions show how AI can enhance governance, transparency, and service delivery.
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