Tel Aviv-based company says its software is already used by Blue Origin, Cadillac Formula 1, Sandvik and Iscar to reduce CNC programming time and help manufacturers retain expertise as skilled workers retireLimitless Labs, a developer of artificial intelligence software for precision manufacturing, said Tuesday it has raised $20 million in Series A funding to expand its AI platform and research efforts.The round was co-led by Dell Technologies Capital and Square Peg, with participation from Grove Ventures, Meron Capital and Kinetica.1 View gallery Limitless Lab founders Shahaf Finder, David Priev and Assaf Peleg (Photo: Oron Kaplan)The company, formerly known as LimitlessCNC, develops AI software for computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing, or CAD/CAM, used in mechanical parts production. Its technology is designed to help manufacturers capture and standardize the expertise of experienced CNC programmers.Since emerging from stealth, Limitless Labs said it has moved from pilot programs to production deployments with Blue Origin, Cadillac Formula 1, Sandvik and Iscar in industries including aerospace, defense, motorsports and industrial machinery. The company said its software can reduce CNC programming time by as much as 50%.The platform supports International Traffic in Arms Regulations compliance and can be deployed on AWS GovCloud to meet security requirements in regulated industries.The company said manufacturers are facing a growing labor shortage as experienced workers retire. Nearly one-quarter of the U.S. manufacturing workforce is age 55 or older, while 97% of manufacturers identify knowledge retention as a leading concern. According to the company, 409,000 manufacturing jobs are currently unfilled and the shortfall could reach 1.9 million positions by 2033."The manufacturing world doesn't just need more automation, it needs a better way to capture and scale the expertise that still lives inside the heads of a relatively small number of experienced machinists," said David Priev, co-founder and chief executive of Limitless Labs.Priev said the company's software is intended to help manufacturers standardize processes, reduce programming bottlenecks and allow senior programmers to focus on more complex tasks.At the center of the platform is what the company calls a Physical AI Foundation Model, trained on machining processes, CAD geometry and machine operating constraints. The model powers the company's CAM Agent, which works with software platforms including Mastercam, Siemens NX and PTC Creo.According to the company, the software analyzes CAD files, identifies manufacturing features, recommends tools, sequences operations and generates toolpaths while allowing engineers to retain control over the workflow."Limitless Labs represents the next wave of enterprise AI, moving beyond digital workflows and into the physical world of precision manufacturing," said Yair Snir, managing director at Dell Technologies Capital.Lior Handelsman, a general partner at Grove Ventures and co-founder of SolarEdge, said the company has combined technical innovation with practical software applications that could change manufacturing processes for critical components.Limitless Labs said the new funding will be used to build a U.S. commercial organization, continue development of its AI model and expand its CAM Agent capabilities. The company also plans to expand its research center in Tel Aviv and expects to roughly double its workforce over the next year.The company said it will participate in the Reindustrialize 2026 conference on June 16-17 in Detroit.Founded in 2024 by Priev, Assaf Peleg and Shahaf Finder, Limitless Labs is headquartered in Tel Aviv and is expanding its commercial operations in the United States. The company said it has raised $27.3 million to date.
Limitless Labs raises $20 million to expand AI platform for precision manufacturing
Tel Aviv-based company says its software is already used by Blue Origin, Cadillac Formula 1, Sandvik and Iscar to reduce CNC programming time and help manufacturers retain expertise as skilled workers retire








