SolarStack: The Berlin Deep-Tech Startup You Need to Know About This Month
A Kreuzberg-based team has cracked perovskite tandem solar cells—and just landed €18 million in Series A funding that could reshape Europe's renewable energy sector.
A Kreuzberg-based team has cracked perovskite tandem solar cells—and just landed €18 million in Series A funding that could reshape Europe's renewable energy sector.

When venture capitalists from Munich and Amsterdam descended on a converted warehouse in Kreuzberg last week, they weren't looking at another consumer app or logistics platform. They were examining prototype solar panels so efficient that they've caught the attention of major industrial manufacturers across the EU. SolarStack, the deep-tech startup officially closing its Series A round this week, represents a rare moment in Berlin's venture ecosystem: breakthrough physics meeting commercial viability.
Founded in 2023 by a team of materials scientists who met at the Helmholtz-Zentrum in Adlershof, SolarStack has spent two years perfecting a manufacturing process for perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells—devices that theoretically achieve 30-35% energy conversion efficiency, compared to 22% for conventional silicon panels. The company's Kreuzberg lab, tucked between the neighbourhood's famous street art and independent galleries, now runs continuous production tests that rival facilities in California and South Korea.
The €18 million injection—led by the Berlin-based VC firm Lowercarbon Capital and joined by European climate tech specialists—places SolarStack at the centre of a broader shift in Berlin's startup funding landscape. While venture capital in the city has traditionally favoured software and SaaS businesses, the past eighteen months have seen a marked increase in deep-tech and climate-tech financing. Figures from the Berlin Chamber of Commerce show climate-related ventures attracted €340 million in 2025, up 67% from 2023.
What makes SolarStack particularly significant isn't just the funding size—it's the pathway. The company has already signed manufacturing partnerships with two German industrial conglomerates and one Swiss supplier, suggesting a credible route to market within 18-24 months. In a tech ecosystem often criticised for producing unicorns on paper rather than tangible industrial innovation, that matters.
The broader context is reshaping how Berlin's venture community thinks about impact. While the city's software scene remains globally competitive, institutional investors increasingly see deep-tech solving genuine infrastructure problems—energy generation, carbon capture, sustainable materials—as the next growth frontier. SolarStack's success could catalyse more physics and chemistry PhDs from Adlershof and Dahlem to commercialise research rather than pursue academic careers.
By August, the startup plans to announce its first commercial manufacturing partnership outside Germany. For a city rebuilding its post-industrial identity, that announcement may signal something more important than funding figures: that Berlin's tech scene has finally cracked the code on turning Nobel Prize-level science into venture-scale business.
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