Synthesia Statistics: ARR, Valuation & Enterprise Adoption
Synthesia: ARR grew from $88M to $146M in 2025 (+66%), raised a $200M Series E in January 2026 at a $4B valuation - nearly double its $2.1B valuation a year earlier. Leader in enterprise AI avatar video.
Synthesia dominates enterprise AI avatar video - corporate training, internal comms, and how-to content delivered by photorealistic digital presenters. The London-based company nearly doubled its valuation in a year, reaching $4 billion in January 2026 on the strength of 66% ARR growth.
Key statistics
Synthesia’s annual recurring revenue grew from $88 million to $146 million during 2025 - a 66% increase.
The January 2026 Series E ($200M) valued Synthesia at $4 billion, up from $2.1 billion just one year earlier.
Synthesia raised a $200 million Series E in January 2026 to expand its enterprise avatar and video agent platform.
Two-thirds revenue growth in a single year - driven by enterprise training and communications use cases that avoid filming costs entirely.
Synthesia vs HeyGen: the two avatar leaders compared
The avatar category splits cleanly: Synthesia sells top-down to enterprise L&D and communications teams, HeyGen grows bottom-up through marketing and UGC-style content. Synthesia is bigger ($146M vs ~$95M ARR); HeyGen ramped faster ($1M to $95M in under three years).
| Metric | Synthesia | HeyGen |
|---|---|---|
| ARR (latest) | $146M (end 2025) | ~$95M (Sep 2025) |
| 2025 ARR growth | +66% ($88M → $146M) | ~+170% ($35M → $95M) |
| Valuation | $4B (Jan 2026 Series E) | ~$500M (2024 round) |
| Core buyer | Enterprise L&D, internal comms | Marketing teams, UGC-style ads |
| Localization | 140+ languages | 175+ languages |
ARR figures from Sacra and TechFundingNews; valuations from funding-round reporting. Both companies are private; figures are investor-sourced estimates.
Why do enterprises choose avatar video?
Avatar platforms remove the most expensive parts of corporate video - studios, presenters, and reshoots - and make 140-language localization a dropdown option.
Roughly 46% of corporate training programs use AI-generated interactive video scenarios.
AI-assisted production cuts per-minute video costs from ~$4,500 to ~$400 - the core economics behind Synthesia’s enterprise pitch.
Monthly active users across AI video platforms surpassed 124 million in January 2026, with avatar tools like Synthesia and HeyGen a major share of business usage.
How we compiled this data
ARR figures come from Sacra’s tracking corroborated by TechFundingNews coverage of the January 2026 Series E. We deliberately present Synthesia alongside HeyGen because citing either alone overstates its category dominance; together they define the enterprise avatar market’s roughly $240M combined ARR. Last full review: June 12, 2026.
Before you cite these numbers
- Synthesia is private; ARR figures are investor-sourced, not audited. The $4B valuation is a primary-round price.
- The 46% corporate-training adoption stat measures AI video broadly, not Synthesia specifically.
- Avatar video quality claims change quarterly as models update; usage and revenue figures age better than any "most realistic" claim.
Frequently asked questions
How much is Synthesia worth?
Synthesia was valued at $4 billion in its January 2026 Series E round, which raised $200 million. The valuation nearly doubled from $2.1 billion a year earlier.
How much revenue does Synthesia make?
Synthesia’s ARR grew from $88 million to $146 million during 2025 - a 66% year-over-year increase.
What is Synthesia used for?
Primarily enterprise video: corporate training, internal communications, product explainers, and multilingual localization, delivered by AI avatars instead of filmed presenters.
Sources
Figures on this page are compiled from the following publishers and reports. Where sources disagree, we present the range and note the methodology difference.