London-Based Qoro Quantum Raises $750K Funding In Pre-seed Round
Apr 10, 2026 | By Kailee Rainse

London-based Qoro Quantum has raised $750,000 in a pre-seed funding round to build software infrastructure for hybrid quantum-classical computing.
SUMMARY
- London-based Qoro Quantum has raised $750,000 in a pre-seed funding round to build software infrastructure for hybrid quantum-classical computing.
The round included participation from Ada Ventures, Superangels Venture Fund, and the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
Qoro Quantum is a deeptech startup building infrastructure for distributed quantum computing. Its platform provides a unified orchestration layer that links classical systems such as CPUs and GPUs with emerging quantum processors enabling hybrid applications to run across mixed computing environments.
As quantum computing advances, companies are already using combinations of classical and early-stage quantum systems to solve complex problems.
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However, integrating these technologies remains complex and resource-intensive, often requiring specialised expertise, long development cycles, and custom-built code.
Qoro Quantum aims to simplify this process by reducing integration complexity and enabling different computing systems to work together within a single, unified environment.
The company’s platform includes a network stack and cloud-based control system that automates quantum algorithm execution, manages resource allocation, and synchronises multi-vendor computing clusters.
By abstracting underlying hardware complexity, it enables applications to be built once and deployed across both high-performance and quantum computing environments.
The new funding will support further development of its hybrid quantum-classical software layer, alongside key engineering hires, grant co-funding initiatives and an accelerated product rollout ahead of its next funding round.
While the broader industry is racing to build physical quantum hardware, we are focused on the immediate software bottleneck required to actually use those machines, said Dan Holme, CEO of Qoro Quantum.









