Taktile raised $110 million in a Series C funding round led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, the company announced June 24. The investment will fuel expansion of its platform that lets insurers and banks automate high-stakes decisions - such as reimbursing claims, stopping fraud, and underwriting business loans - by combining AI agents, business rules, and human oversight.
"Today, thousands of employees process these decisions manually," said Taktile CEO and Co-Founder Maik Taro Wehmeyer. "Leaders want to redeploy that capacity to higher-value work, while ensuring every outcome - whether human or AI-driven - remains the best for the business and customers. This is what Taktile enables."
How the platform works
The company's modular Agentic Decision Platform brings AI Agents & Automation into workflows that have traditionally required human judgment. It combines AI agents with business rules, real-time context, and a human-in-the-loop framework so that final decisions stay under institutional control. In production deployments, Taktile says the system has achieved 95% automation in B2B underwriting and a 75% reduction in anti-money laundering (AML) false positives - metrics that directly affect operational costs and regulatory compliance.
Investor confidence
Jade Mandel, managing director at Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, said in the announcement: "Banks and insurers consistently tell us that Taktile has helped them transform how their teams make decisions with AI - unlocking faster product launches, sharper risk outcomes, and meaningful operational efficiency."
Where the growth is headed
The Series C brings Taktile's total funding to $184 million, following a $54 million Series B in early 2025. The company plans to use the fresh capital to expand its presence across the United States, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. In September, Taktile said its AI agents let banks process five times more small- to medium-sized business loans without adding headcount - a indicator that similar efficiency gains could apply to insurance underwriting and claims processes.
Why this matters for insurance professionals
Claims adjusting, underwriting, and fraud investigation have long relied on manual, time-intensive work that strains margins and slows customer service. AI agents that can reliably automate routine decisions while flagging only the ambiguous cases for human review change that equation. The 75% drop in AML false positives that Taktile reports, for instance, means compliance teams can focus on genuine risks instead of chasing false alarms. As more carriers adopt AI for Insurance, professionals who know how to configure, monitor, and govern these systems will become essential - not just for cost savings, but for maintaining trust in every automated decision.
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