Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC), a superconducting quantum hardware spinout from Oxford University, has closed a £260 million Series C. It is the largest private quantum computing round ever raised in Europe, according to Tech.eu. The round was led by Bullhound Capital, with the British Business Bank, Fynveur, Cofides, Alpha Edison, Fulcrum Asset Management, Pentland Ventures and Magdalen College Oxford joining alongside existing backers Oxford Science Enterprises, SBI and Chevron Technology Ventures.

What the money buys
OQC, founded in 2017 and based in Reading, builds superconducting quantum computers. These are machines that use qubits rather than classical bits, and OQC delivers access to them as a cloud service through data centre deployments. Customers can run workloads remotely without owning hardware. The model has become standard across the quantum sector as capital expenditure on cryogenic systems remains prohibitive for end users. CEO Gerald Mullally said the capital will allow OQC to scale internationally, advance its technology roadmap, and meet rising demand for “secure, scalable access to quantum computing infrastructure,” per the company’s statement. The figure is independently corroborated by industry trade press, including New Electronics.
Who is actually buying quantum compute
The customer mix matters more than the headline number. OQC identifies financial services, defence, and security companies as the primary drivers of demand. These are the same three verticals that anchor procurement cycles for most frontier compute technologies in Europe and North America. Banks want quantum for portfolio optimisation and cryptographic migration. Defence ministries want it for sensing, simulation, and post-quantum cryptography. Security agencies want it because adversaries are presumed to want it.
The pattern is hard to miss.
That procurement structure explains why a Reading-based hardware company can raise £260 million in a market where most enterprise software rounds have compressed. Quantum is being underwritten less by commercial ROI projections than by sovereign anxiety about who controls the next cryptographic substrate. Silicon Canals has previously covered OQC’s earlier €44.2M raise, which was roughly an order of magnitude smaller and led by a narrower investor base.
The political framing
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves described the round as “a major vote of confidence in the UK’s quantum sector,” positioning OQC as evidence that British industrial strategy is producing globally relevant deep-tech companies. The presence of the British Business Bank in the cap table reinforces that framing: this is partially a state-backed bet, structured to retain UK-headquartered ownership of a strategically sensitive technology stack.
Mullally’s own framing, “a clear shift in the market, from long-term promise to near-term delivery,” is the standard sector messaging in 2026. Whether the engineering matches the rhetoric remains an open question across the entire quantum hardware industry, where error correction thresholds, qubit coherence times, and useful problem sets are still being negotiated in public roadmaps.
Why this round signals more than it states
Three facts sit alongside each other. Quantum computing remains pre-revenue for most operators. Defence and financial services budgets are funding the sector regardless. And European governments are actively co-investing to ensure the technology base does not consolidate exclusively in the US or China. The £260 million is the visible transaction. The structural story is the alignment of sovereign procurement, institutional capital, and a university spinout into a single pipeline — one that increasingly defines how strategic technologies get built in Western economies.