AI startups don’t enjoy SaaS-era margins: Here’s what Kalaari Capital’s Harshit Kumar says founders should do instead – The Economic Times

The Economic Times


AI-native startups will not enjoy the same luxury of high gross margins that traditional software-as-a-service (SaaS) firms once did, said Harshit Kumar, associate vice president (AVP) of venture capital (VC) firm Kalaari Capital during an event in Gurugram.

Kumar attributes this decline in margins to rising inference and review costs, saying AI startups cannot rely on the kind of high margins traditionally associated with SaaS businesses.

“(There is) just (one) disappointment that AI companies will not have the luxury of what earlier SaaS companies had (of) higher cost margins because of the inference and the review costs,” Kumar said during a panel discussion at TiE Delhi NCR India Innovation Day 2026.

ETtech had previously reported that SaaS firms typically enjoyed high gross margins of 70–85%. Per a 2025 JM Financial report, their fixed costs, such as investments in technology, do not rise in proportion to revenue, making them more profitable as they scale. Meanwhile, according to the State of AI 2025 report by VC firm Bessemer Venture Partners, gross margins for AI companies are much lower, at around 60%, with some companies reporting margins as low as 25%.

Speaking about the evolution of AI-native businesses, Kumar said companies built “from the ground up” with AI are fundamentally different from firms that merely add AI features onto existing products. He argued that AI-native companies must embed themselves deeply into enterprise and consumer workflows, with customers ultimately paying for measurable outcomes and return on investment rather than for software access alone.

“For us, whatever we call AI native is something that is built from the ground up with AI, and it’s not an add-on at the end,” Kumar said. He added that enterprises and consumers alike are “eventually going to pay for the outcome” generated by the product or service.