Google and Accel have announced the selection of five early-stage companies for their 2026 Atoms AI cohort . Chosen from a pool of more than 4,000 applications, these Google and Accel AI startups will receive financial backing and technological resources to develop artificial intelligence products . The joint AI accelerator program, announced in November, focuses on backing founders building AI products linked to India .
The selected startups will secure up to $2 million in co-investment funding, which will be split equally between venture firm Accel and the Google AI Futures Fund . Additionally, each company will receive up to $350,000 in compute credits across Google Cloud, Gemini, and Google DeepMind .
Moving Beyond AI Wrappers
The selection process highlighted a preference for original concepts over superficial technology layers . According to Accel partner Prayank Swaroop, roughly 70% of the rejected applications were “wrappers” . These denied startups layered basic AI features, such as chatbots, onto existing software but did not reimagine new workflows using AI .
Furthermore, many of the rejected applications fell into crowded categories, including marketing automation and AI recruitment tools . Swaroop noted that investors saw little novelty in these areas, and startups in those sectors often struggle to differentiate themselves . The application pool demonstrated a heavy focus on enterprise software rather than consumer products . About 62% of the submissions focused on productivity tools, while another 13% were dedicated to software development and coding . Despite this trend, Swaroop expressed that he had hoped to see more ideas targeting the healthcare and education sectors . This year’s program received nearly four times the number of applications compared to previous Accel Atoms cohorts, featuring many first-time founders .
Meet the Selected Startups
The final five companies were chosen for demonstrating bold and original thinking . Jonathan Silber, co-founder and director of the Google AI Futures Fund, stated that the selected startups align closely with areas where Google expects AI to see deeper real-world adoption . The cohort includes companies working across enterprise AI, voice automation, entertainment, and industrial manufacturing .
K-Dense is developing an AI “co-scientist” designed to accelerate research . The technology is built to help researchers reason through complex problems in life sciences, physics, and chemistry .
Dodge.ai is a San Francisco-based startup founded in 2025 . The company is developing autonomous AI agents aimed at modernizing enterprise ERP management within SAP environments .
Persistence Labs is targeting the large market for real-time customer support automation . The startup focuses on building voice AI solutions specifically tailored for call center operations .
Zingroll represents the entertainment sector within the cohort . The company is building an AI-native entertainment platform that offers movies and shows generated entirely by artificial intelligence .
LevelPlane is applying artificial intelligence to industrial automation . The startup focuses on automating manufacturing processes in the automotive and aerospace sectors .
Empowering AI Infrastructure
The Atoms program does not require the selected startups to use Google’s models exclusively . Silber noted that many companies combine multiple models depending on their specific workflows . A primary goal of the program is to gather feedback on how Google’s models perform in real-world applications . Insights from these startups can be fed back to Google DeepMind teams to improve future models, creating what Silber described as a “flywheel” between startup experimentation and AI development . If a startup uses an alternative model, Silber explained that it signals to Google that it has work to do to build the best model in the market .
Silber emphasized that AI is moving from a novelty to a core piece of industrial and scientific infrastructure . By providing these startups with early access to advanced models and compute power, the program aims to help them solve hard problems faster and more responsibly .
Accel partners Prayank Swaroop and Shekhar Kirani stated that the Atoms program has always been about backing founders at the earliest moment of possibility, when their ideas consist of ambition and insight . The venture firm noted that its Atoms program has backed more than 45 startups to date, which have collectively raised over $300 million in follow-on funding . Accel has previously invested in prominent companies such as Flipkart, Freshworks, Swiggy, Urban Company, and Zetwerk .
