Columnists
The AI Effect: How is it Shaping Germany’s New Startup Geography?
Yeşim Çevik | trbusiness.de Germany Representative
When speaking with international founders and investors, I often still encounter an outdated narrative: that anyone looking to make a real impact in Germany’s tech sector must settle in the well-known, overcrowded hubs. However, as a strategist passionately committed to “Building Bridges,” I have been observing tectonic shifts beneath the surface for some time. The newly released data from the Next Generation Report for the first half of 2026 confirms in black and white what has long been signaling in our daily practice: the German startup ecosystem is breaking away from its centralized structure, reinventing itself locally, and demonstrating unprecedentedly dynamic growth across regional areas.
With a historic peak of 3,053 new startups in the first half of 2026, we are witnessing a phenomenal jump of 52% compared to the previous half-year. What fascinates me most is that even the supposedly weakest month of this year—January with 400 new startups—easily outpaced the strongest month of the entire previous year. While the traditional labor market is under cyclical pressure, the agile world of innovation is showing impressive, decentralized resilience.
The Technological Catalyst: AI as the New Standard
The fact that startup processes today can be designed in a much leaner, more digital, and more flexible way relies on a very clear lever: Artificial Intelligence. In my daily collaborations and discussions, I frequently see how AI tools shatter barriers to market entry, allowing teams to build world-class technology from anywhere. The numbers reflect this perfectly: one in three newly founded startups (34%) now has a clear AI connection, compared to 27% in 2025.
AI is no longer just an isolated tech trend; it is the cornerstone of modern business models. This power not only propels the software sector to the top with 844 new startups but also drives a phenomenal 125% growth wave in the traditional industrial sector. The established economy is bringing disruptive innovation directly into its own regions.
The Time of Regional Ecosystems: Hamburg and Hessen at Express Speed
For me, the most exciting insight lies in this new geography away from the usual paths. The real dynamism is currently unfolding in federal states that deeply blend a strong Mittelstand (medium-sized enterprises), well-established pioneer industries, and digital transformation. This fully supports the “Radical Localization” approach that I have championed for some time.
Hamburg and Hessen are setting the pace in this race with growth rates of 83% and 82%, respectively. Hamburg, in particular, is making steady strides in the per capita startup rankings and, with 212 new foundations in the first half of the year, has even overtaken the traditional heavyweight Munich (208) for the first time.
Frankfurt Shifts Gears: From Financial Hub to Tech Center
As a Frankfurt resident, I must admit my heart beats faster looking at the city rankings: Frankfurt am Main made the biggest leap in the leading group, rocketing from 12th to 5th place. With 17,9 new foundations per 100,000 residents, the Main metropolis now positions itself directly behind the established leaders.
The future lies precisely here: if we want to successfully manage the internationalization and globalization of scale-ups, we must fortify the bridges between traditional clusters (such as Frankfurt’s strong finance and logistics sectors) and innovative tech startups. Intercultural competence, global networking, and the conscious promotion of diversity within the ecosystem will be the most crucial catalysts.
The Bottom Line: The Energy is There, Let’s Deploy It Globally
The startup boom of the first half of 2026 clearly demonstrates that tomorrow’s German economy will be decentralized, technology-driven, and highly collaborative. Easier market access driven by AI provides us with the tools to build new innovative lighthouses across Germany. Let’s work together to strengthen these regional innovation bridges and boldly extend them into the global marketplace.
Data Basis and Sources: All statistical data, percentages, and key metrics in this column are based on the official report „Next Generation: Startup-Neugründungen in Deutschland (Januar – Juni 2026)“, jointly published by the Startup-Verband and startupdetector. The analyses are derived from the systematic recording and verification of German Commercial Register (Handelsregister) data from the first half of 2026.






