Dutch no-code website builder Framer has secured $100 million in Series D funding, pushing its valuation to $2 billion and cementing its place among the fast-rising “double unicorns” of the global tech scene.

The round, announced this week, was led by existing backers Meritech and Atomico, marking another vote of confidence in the company’s growth trajectory. Framer, which reports more than 500,000 monthly active users, previously raised $27 million in a Series C round in 2023, also led by Meritech, though the valuation at the time was undisclosed.

“With this funding, we’re doubling down on enterprise growth and AI, so any company can confidently run their entire website on Framer,” said Koen Bok, CEO and co-founder, in a statement.

Unlike traditional website builders focused on static landing pages, Framer’s platform allows teams to create and update dynamic, design-forward websites without developer input. The company has also been layering in enterprise features such as analytics and security, with the broader ambition of helping organizations “run their entire .com.”

Founded in Amsterdam by Bok and Jorn van Dijk—who previously sold their design studio to Facebook in 2011—Framer has built its reputation as “the website builder loved by designers,” positioning itself against incumbents like Squarespace and Wix, and newer entrants in the so-called “vibe coding” movement, including Cursor and Lovable.

The company’s pivot toward enterprise clients is accelerating growth. Since rolling out business plans late last year, corporate customers have made up the majority of new sign-ups, including high-profile names like Miro, Perplexity, and Scale AI, as well as 40% of startups in Y Combinator’s most recent batch.

That shift is already paying off financially. A company spokesperson confirmed that Framer has reached $50 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) in 2025, with plans to double to $100 million ARR by next year. Bok added that the company has been operating at break-even for the past year, signaling sustainable growth alongside rapid expansion.

The funding comes at a time of intense competition in the web-building and design software space, with market leaders like Figma and Wix pushing further into enterprise markets and embedding AI-driven features. Framer’s fresh capital injection positions it to stay competitive while capitalizing on its design-centric reputation.