Gatsby has raised $60.6M in total across 7 funding rounds.
Gatsby's investors include Dig Ventures, Four Rivers Group, Independent, Index Ventures, Mango Capital, Motivate Ventures, Outrun Ventures, Propeller VC, Vitalize Venture Group, Augusto Marietti, Rudra Peram, Scott Belsky.
Gatsby is an open-source React-based framework for building fast, secure, and scalable static websites, progressive web apps (PWAs), and dynamic sites with features like server-side rendering (SSR) and Deferred Static Generation (DSG).[1][3][4] It serves developers and teams creating high-performance web experiences by pulling data from SaaS platforms, APIs, databases, CMS like WordPress, and more via a unified GraphQL data layer, eliminating glue code.[1][3][4] The framework solves performance bottlenecks in modern web development, enabling blazing-fast sites deployed on edge networks like Netlify's, with over 2,500 plugins for extensibility; Gatsby, Inc. raised $46.8M before its 2023 acquisition by Netlify, marking strong growth in the developer tools space.[1][3]
Gatsby launched in 2015 as an open-source static site generator built on Node.js, React, and GraphQL, developed by Gatsby, Inc.[3] The company, founded in 2017 and headquartered in San Francisco, gained traction with its innovative data-pulling capabilities from diverse sources.[1][3] Key milestones include a $15M Series A in 2019 and $20M Series B in 2020, fueling expansion, followed by Netlify's acquisition of Gatsby, Inc. in February 2023, which integrated Gatsby Cloud into Netlify's platform (terminated in August 2023).[1][3] This evolution shifted focus from standalone hosting to enhancing Netlify's edge delivery for Gatsby sites, with the latest stable release (5.14.0) in November 2024.[3]
Gatsby rides the JAMstack and headless CMS wave, enabling static-first sites with dynamic data to meet demands for sub-second load times amid rising mobile traffic and Core Web Vitals scrutiny.[3][4] Timing aligns with React's dominance and edge computing growth, where market forces like API proliferation and developer productivity needs favor unified data layers over monolithic stacks.[1][4] It influences the ecosystem by powering enterprise sites (e.g., via WordPress/Drupal integrations) and fostering open-source innovation, now amplified by Netlify's 2M+ developer community post-acquisition.[1][2][3]
Gatsby's Netlify integration positions it for deeper penetration in edge-native web dev, with trends like AI-driven content and composable architectures likely boosting its GraphQL layer.[3][4] Expect expanded SSR/DSG adoption for e-commerce and marketing sites, plus plugin evolution for emerging frameworks. Its influence will grow as a go-to for performance-obsessed teams, solidifying its role in building the next generation of blazing-fast web experiences that started as a 2015 open-source generator.[1][3][4]
Gatsby has raised $60.6M across 7 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $10.0M Series A in March 2021.