Pakistani voice AI startup Uplift AI has raised $3.5 million in a funding round led by Y Combinator, the Silicon Valley accelerator known for backing companies such as Airbnb, Dropbox, and GitLab.
The round also saw participation from Indus Valley Capital, Pakistan’s leading early-stage venture fund, along with Pioneer Fund, Conjunction, Moment Ventures, and a group of angel investors from Silicon Valley.
Founded by former Apple and Amazon engineers Zaid Qureshi and Hammad Malik, Uplift AI is building voice AI models tailored for regional Pakistani languages, including Urdu, Punjabi, and Balochi, enabling users to interact with technology using speech rather than text.
The company’s flagship model, Orator, is designed to speak Urdu with human-like realism. According to the startup, its technology is already gaining traction among developers and small businesses, with more than 1,000 developers actively building products using Uplift AI’s APIs. Use cases range from FIR registration bots to health intake systems for rural clinics.
Uplift AI believes voice-first technology is critical for Pakistan, where an estimated 42% of adults are unable to read, creating barriers to digital access and economic participation.
“Voice technology has the potential to uplift our entire GDP by giving everyone access to knowledge and opportunity. We founded Uplift AI to make this happen now, rather than in the distant future,” said Hammad Malik, CEO of Uplift AI.
Backing the startup, Aatif Awan, Partner at Indus Valley Capital, highlighted the importance of voice as a gateway to the digital economy in emerging markets. “Built by former Apple and Amazon engineers, Uplift AI is delivering the foundational voice AI infrastructure needed to unlock this massive opportunity,” he said.
Industry leaders are already seeing impact. Sultan Raja, Head of AI Transformation at Syngenta Pakistan, noted that voice technology can bridge critical information gaps in agriculture. “In Pakistan, agriculture doesn’t lack effort — it lacks accessible intelligence. Uplift AI’s voice technology allows us to deliver that intelligence to farmers in their own language at scale,” he said.
According to Zaid Qureshi, CTO of Uplift AI, the company has built its technology entirely in-house, from data gathering and labelling to model training, to avoid compromises typically found in off-the-shelf solutions for regional languages.
“Our approach is paying off — it’s heartening to receive feedback from customers who find our model quality superior to OpenAI and Google for these languages,” he said.
With the new funding, Uplift AI plans to expand voice-first technology across all major languages in Pakistan. While the company sees itself as a global player focused on underserved regional languages, Pakistan will remain its primary market in the near to medium term.
Hammad Malik shared that approximately $1 million from the round will be allocated toward data gathering and labelling, a move expected to create thousands of jobs locally. The remaining capital will be invested in research and development to build advanced speech understanding and speech generation models for Pakistan’s five major languages.
While Uplift AI is not yet working directly with government departments, its platform is currently accessible to startups and small businesses.
“Any startup or small business can sign up and start using our API right now. Over 1,000 developers already are,” Malik said.
