CertiK Closes $80M Round Led by Sequoia, Nearing $1B Valuation

This capital raise is the third round of funding for CertiK within the past four months, bringing its total amount raised to over $140 million.

article-image

Blockworks exclusive art by Axel Rangel

share

key takeaways

  • Investors that participated in the round include Tiger Global, Coatue Management, and GL Ventures’ Hillhouse Capital’s VC arm
  • This capital raise is the third round of funding for CertiK within the past four months, bringing its total amount raised to over $140 million

Blockchain security firm CertiK has closed an $80 million raise led by Sequoia, bringing its valuation near $1 billion. The funding will be used for the development and operation of more innovative products.

Investors that participated in the round include Tiger Global, Coatue Management, and GL Ventures’ Hillhouse Capital’s VC arm. This capital raise is the third round of funding for CertiK within the past four months, bringing its total amount raised to over $140 million.

“The reason we raised this round was majorly due to rapid growth that we have made in the past year,” Ronghui Gu, CEO and co-founder of CertiK said in an interview with Blockworks. “We have had revenue growth of about 20 times and our team has grown four times, so we are moving really fast,” Gu said. 

CertiK co-founders Ronghui Gu (left) and Zhong Shao.

The New York-based firm provides security products and services to over 1,800 clients, and its monitoring system Skynet has checked more than $4 billion asset transfers, $3 billion transactions and 4 million accounts in the past year, Gu said. 

“Last year, the total assets lost due to software error was about $50 million. This year, so far, we have lost about $130 million, so that number almost tripled in less than a year,” Gu said. 

CertiK hopes to develop products such as scammer alerts and token protection — currently, things that are missing from the blockchain security ecosystem, Gu said.

“The entire blockchain is about trust but the current system is not trustworthy,” he said. “That’s the challenge we aim to address. How can we bring trust back to the community beyond smart contracts, auditing and how can we provide more security products and one-stop products to help bring the trust back to the community?” he added. 

In 2022, CertiK will focus on non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and the metaverse as demand for those two divisions in the crypto industry has increased in the past year, Gu said.


Get the day’s top crypto news and insights delivered to your inbox every evening. Subscribe to Blockworks’ free newsletter now.


Tags

Upcoming Events

Industry City | Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

morpho 2 graphic.png

Research

Utilizing a ‘DeFi Mullet’ approach, Coinbase’s Bitcoin-backed loans integration with Morpho demonstrates a powerful blueprint for CEXs to monetize dormant assets by expanding adoption of wrapped products (cbBTC, USDC) while also supporting native and/or preferred DeFi ecosystems (Base) which can further lead to downstream growth in onchain liquidity and increased utilization of the related assets.

article-image

The network is at a “pivotal juncture,” Blockworks Research’s Marc-Thomas Arjoon said

article-image

Altcoin trade volume has returned to pre-FTX levels, but with a shrinking pool of market leaders

article-image

Solana Foundation’s former head of strategy proposes increasing the disinflation rate

article-image

With much of the bitcoin mining supply chain based in Asia, US-based operations now face higher equipment prices

article-image

Anticipating an economic downturn, venture firms may be less likely to invest

article-image

Trump’s tariffs may have potentially significant impacts on GDP, household spending and food prices — if they hold