Israeli-founded PointFive, a company that helps enterprises reduce cloud and artificial intelligence infrastructure costs, said Monday it raised $60 million in a Series B funding round led by Accel.
The round also included Salesforce Ventures, Entrée Capital, Perpetual Growth, Vesey Ventures, Sheva Ventures and Index Ventures. PointFive said the funding follows a sixfold increase in annual recurring revenue between 2024 and 2025 and will be used for product development, go-to-market expansion and growth in the United States.
Founded in January 2023 by Alon Arvatz, Amir Hozez and Gal Ben David, PointFive operates from Tel Aviv, London and the United States and employs more than 100 people. The company works with enterprises spending more than $1 million a year on cloud and AI services.
PointFive’s platform is designed to identify inefficient spending across cloud infrastructure, data platforms and AI workloads, then route recommendations to the engineering teams responsible for fixing them. The company says its technology runs without agents and in read-only mode, allowing it to surface waste that standard cost-management tools and manual reviews often miss.
The company says customers report cloud cost savings of about 30%, with an average return on investment of more than 1,000% based on realized savings. Its enterprise customers include Nubank, E.ON, Hertz, Fanatics, Swiss Post and NICE. According to PointFive, Nubank reached positive ROI within 10 days of deployment.
The funding comes as companies face growing costs from AI infrastructure, including the expense of running models, AI coding tools and related data workloads. PointFive cited the FinOps Foundation’s 2026 State of FinOps research, which found that workload optimization and waste reduction have become the field’s top priority, while 98% of organizations now manage AI spending, up from 63% a year earlier.
Alongside the funding announcement, PointFive is launching a new platform experience called AI Efficiency OS, which is meant to help engineering teams continuously optimize cloud and AI costs. The platform can answer questions about workloads in chat, support custom applications built on top of it and run automated remediation workflows.
The company is also launching TokenShift, a tool for monitoring and optimizing the use of AI coding agents. PointFive says TokenShift gives teams visibility into how tools such as Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot and Windsurf are being used, while helping manage token consumption and governance.
“Every company is now an AI company, and every AI company is about to get a bill it did not budget for,” said Arvatz, PointFive’s co-founder and CEO. “The old playbook was never built for this: tag everything, build a dashboard, and hope someone acts on it. PointFive finds the waste at the source and puts the fix in the engineer’s hands. That is the only way efficiency scales.”
Philippe Botteri, a partner at Accel, said global spending on cloud and AI is expected to grow from about $350 billion in 2025 to more than $1 trillion by 2030, making AI infrastructure costs an increasingly large enterprise expense.
“The PointFive team realized that managing cloud and AI infrastructure is an engineering problem, not a dashboard problem, and they have built the leading agentic platform to help engineering teams maximize cloud and AI efficiency,” Botteri said.
PointFive said it will use the new funding to deepen its coverage across production AI services, data platforms and cloud infrastructure, and to expand its U.S. presence.



