Didit announced it has closed an additional $6 million in seed funding, bringing its total seed financing to $7.5 million as the company builds identity infrastructure designed for the AI era. The funding will support global go-to-market expansion, product development, broader programmable identity and fraud coverage, and hiring across product, sales, and customer success teams.
Founded in 2023 by twin brothers Alberto and Alejandro Rosas, Didit is focused on creating programmable identity infrastructure that enables businesses to verify people, companies, AI agents, wallets, and transactions through a developer-first platform.
The round included participation from Y Combinator, Pioneer Fund, Orange Collective, Founders Future, Phosphor Capital, SaaSholic, and Rebel Fund, along with angel investors including Tomer London, co-founder of Gusto, and Taro Fukuyama, founder of Fond.
Didit said its platform connects to global government data sources and evaluates more than 200 signals during each verification process, including biometric liveness, deepfake analysis, injection attack detection, behavioral signals, and document authenticity checks. The company also noted that it develops its AI models internally without relying on third-party dependencies.
According to the company, the identity verification market is being reshaped by the rise of generative AI, increasing fraud sophistication, and expanding regulatory requirements worldwide. Didit cited Europe’s eIDAS 2.0 framework, which will require EU member states to offer digital identity wallets by the end of 2026, while banks and payment providers must accept them by December 2027.
Didit stated that its technology has been validated through Spain’s Financial Sandbox under the supervision of SEPBLAC, CNMV, and the Treasury as providing NFC and active liveness verification that is equivalent to or more secure than in-person identity verification.
The company said it now serves more than 1,500 active B2B customers across fintech, crypto, marketplaces, iGaming, mobility, and government sectors in more than 220 countries and territories. Didit added that revenue has been growing more than 30% month over month and that the company is already profitable.
Didit explained that its services are being used for a range of applications beyond traditional identity verification, including verified social profiles, biometric payments, adaptive age estimation, transaction authentication, and real-time digital signature verification.
The company’s long-term vision is to create an identity wallet that enables users to verify their identity once and reuse it across the internet through a single API call for developers and a simplified experience for consumers.
KEY QUOTES:
“No one was building for what was actually happening. Fraud kept getting smarter, regulators kept getting stricter, and millions of new businesses suddenly needed to verify their users — but every existing provider couldn’t catch the new fraud, had painful onboarding, and hid pricing behind a sales call. So we built the opposite: one API for identity and fraud, public per-module pricing, and an integration so simple that any developer can ship it in five minutes — or any AI coding agent like Claude Code, Codex, or Cursor can ship it in a single prompt.”
“We started with identity verification because it was the hardest piece. What we’re really building is the trust layer for the internet.”
Alberto Rosas, Founder and CEO, Didit
“AI will 1,000x the identity market. In the next decade, every platform will need to verify not only people and businesses, but also agents, transactions, wallets, and delegated actions. Didit is building the identity infrastructure for that world.”
Diego Gomes, Partner, SaaSholic
“At Zeus we were constantly fighting fraudsters. Sophisticated criminals with real IDs, costing us real money. The tools weren’t good enough then. Alberto and Alejandro saw that gap and built something fundamentally better. Identity verification is becoming mandatory for every company on the internet, and most of the existing tools weren’t built for an AI-native world. Didit was.”
Kulveer Taggar, Founder, Phosphor Capital

