Key Highlights
- Seattle-based Adronite raised $5 million in funding, led by Gatemore Capital Management, to expand its AI-powered enterprise code intelligence platform.
- Unlike typical AI coding tools, Adronite ingests entire codebases, including legacy systems, supports 20+ programming languages, and has been proven on 2.5 million lines of code.
- The platform runs within private internal networks, offering enhanced security for large organizations and regulated industries.
Seattle-based startup Adronite has raised $5 million in a Series A funding round led by Gatemore Capital Management. This positions the company to expand its AI-powered platform built for enterprise-scale code intelligence.
The funding arrives at a time of heightened competition in the AI developer tools market, where numerous startups are racing to help engineers write, review, and optimize code. However, Adronite is targeting a different challenge: helping large organizations understand their entire software ecosystems, not just isolated files or snippets.
Beyond Snippets: Full-System Code Intelligence
Unlike many AI coding assistants that operate at the file level, Adronite ingests complete codebases, including modern cloud-native systems and decades-old legacy infrastructure.
Its platform is designed to provide system-wide visibility, enabling enterprises to:
- Analyze security vulnerabilities across interconnected systems
- Modernize aging infrastructure
- Conduct large-scale remediation
- Understand architectural dependencies
The company says its system has already been tested on a 2.5-million-line codebase and supports more than 20 programming languages, making it viable for enterprises managing diverse technology stacks.
In addition to system mapping, Adronite can generate applications from natural language prompts and includes an AI chat interface that surfaces insights across the entire codebase.
Competing in a Crowded AI Developer Market
Adronite enters a competitive landscape that includes established code analysis players such as CAST and Sonar.
The startup argues its key differentiator lies in deployment flexibility and security. Its platform can run entirely within a company’s private network by allowing enterprises to maintain strict control over sensitive intellectual property and internal systems, which is an important consideration for regulated industries.
Leadership and Growth Plans
Adronite was co-founded in 2023 by CEO Edward Rothschild, a former software engineer at Facebook and director of engineering at Nayya.
As part of the funding round, Liad Meidar, managing partner at Gatemore, has been appointed chair of Adronite’s board.
The 15-person startup plans to begin its first commercial enterprise deployments in the first quarter of 2026, signaling a transition from product development to go-to-market execution.
As enterprises grapple with increasingly complex and interconnected software environments, Adronite is betting that understanding the full architecture of code, not just generating it, will become a critical competitive advantage in the AI era.
