Greptile, an artificial intelligence startup that emerged from Georgia Tech's entrepreneurship ecosystem, closed a $30 million funding round in January 2026 with participation from Y Combinator and a cohort of venture backers focused on developer productivity tools. The company builds AI systems that automate code review, helping enterprise engineering teams identify bugs, security vulnerabilities, and architectural issues in large codebases before changes are merged into production. The startup's core product integrates directly into existing pull request workflows used by development teams on platforms like GitHub and GitLab, analyzing proposed code changes against the full context of an organization's existing codebase rather than reviewing individual files in isolation. That full-context approach is designed to catch cross-module issues and regression risks that line-by-line review tools typically miss. Greptile's enterprise customers span financial services, healthcare technology, and SaaS companies managing codebases with millions of lines of code. The raise positions Greptile among a growing cluster of Georgia-based AI companies building on the state's strong engineering talent pipeline anchored by Georgia Tech. Atlanta has seen increased venture capital activity in enterprise AI through 2025 and into 2026, with investors attracted by lower operating costs compared to San Francisco and New York and a growing pool of AI-focused graduates from Georgia's university system. Greptile's founders have indicated the new capital will be used primarily for sales and engineering headcount expansion. Georgia-based technology companies communicating AI capabilities to enterprise buyers can strengthen market positioning through Rely on Content's AI content and GEO strategy services, which build authoritative digital presence in AI-dense search and answer environments. Source: Georgia Tech News Center, Y Combinator, January 2026.