Overview of the Report and Its Publisher
The State of European Tech 2024 is an annual analysis produced by Atomico, the venture‑capital firm founded by Niklas Zennström, co‑creator of Skype. Compiled with data from Atomico’s own portfolio, Dealroom, Eurostat, LinkedIn and extensive surveys of founders, investors and ecosystem participants, the report offers the most comprehensive snapshot of Europe’s technology landscape. It is widely cited by policymakers, investors and industry analysts as the definitive source for understanding trends across the continent.
Investment Landscape and Funding Volumes
The report details total venture‑capital funding across all stages—seed, Series A‑D, growth and late‑stage—highlighting a modest decline from the 2021‑2022 peak but still significant capital flow. Funding is unevenly distributed, with the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Sweden and the Netherlands receiving the largest shares. Sector‑level breakdown shows strong capital allocation to climate‑tech, artificial intelligence, health‑tech, fintech and, notably, urbantech. Investor composition reveals a balanced mix of European and non‑European capital, with US investors maintaining a substantial presence.
Urbantech and Smart‑City Innovation
Urbantech emerges as a focal theme, reflecting growing interest in technologies that improve urban infrastructure, mobility, energy efficiency, construction and property management. The report profiles leading European urbantech companies, mapping their growth trajectories and identifying emerging hubs such as Copenhagen, Barcelona, Berlin and Helsinki. It also underscores the convergence of climate‑tech and urbantech, as cities pursue decarbonisation through digital solutions, making sustainable housing a key investment arena.
Talent Dynamics and Human Capital
Employment in European tech continues to expand, with the report quantifying increases in the number of tech workers and highlighting migration patterns between major tech cities. Universities and research institutions remain vital talent pipelines, while diversity metrics show gradual improvements in gender and ethnicity representation. Competition for talent with the United States persists, though remote‑work trends are reshaping recruitment and retention strategies across the continent.
European Tech Compared with Global Competitors
When benchmarked against the US and Asian ecosystems, European tech demonstrates distinctive strengths in deep‑tech, sustainability and regulation‑driven innovation. The report notes that EU legislation—such as GDPR, the AI Act and the Digital Markets Act—acts both as a constraint and a competitive advantage, fostering trust and standardisation that attract investors focused on responsible technology.
Key Data Highlights for Sustainable Housing
- Total capital invested in European tech shows a year‑over‑year increase of 4 % despite a slight dip from the 2021‑2022 peak.
- Funding allocated to climate‑tech and urbantech together accounts for roughly 22 % of total venture capital, indicating strong financial support for sustainable urban solutions.
- The number of new unicorns in Europe rose to 27, with several founded in housing‑related sectors such as energy‑efficient construction and circular building materials.
- Investment per capita varies widely, with the Nordics receiving the highest funding per resident, reflecting advanced sustainable‑housing policies.
- Talent growth in sustainability‑focused tech firms outpaces the broader tech sector by 3 % annually, signalling a skilled workforce ready to drive green housing innovations.
Access and Use of the Report
The full analysis is available as an interactive website at stateofeuropeantech.com, offering data visualisations, downloadable datasets and sector deep‑dives. Practitioners in sustainable housing can leverage the report’s market intelligence to identify investment trends, locate emerging urbantech hubs, and build evidence‑based business cases for public‑private partnerships aimed at greener, smarter living environments across Europe.
