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UK Quantum Computing Companies 2026

Quantum Zeitgeist
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⚡ Quantum Brief
UK quantum computing saw its largest exit in 2025 when IonQ acquired Oxford Ionics for $1.075B, valuing its chip-scale trapped-ion technology as critical for scaling to 2M+ qubits by 2030. Quantinuum, born from Cambridge Quantum’s merger with Honeywell, hit a $10B valuation in 2025 and filed confidentially for a 2026 IPO targeting $20B+, advancing its fault-tolerant Apollo system by 2029. The UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre at Harwell now hosts seven operational testbeds, backed by £30M from Innovate UK, providing hardware validation for startups like OQC and Aegiq. Riverlane raised $75M for its quantum error correction stack, warning of a 16,000-specialist talent shortage by 2030 as QEC research surged 333% in 2025, partnering with 60% of global quantum firms. Nu Quantum secured $60M—the UK’s largest early-stage quantum round—to build Europe’s first trapped-ion networking lab, addressing scalability by linking smaller processors rather than monolithic designs.
UK Quantum Computing Companies 2026

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Top UK Quantum Computing Companies 2026 | Quantum Zeitgeist The United Kingdom has produced some of the world’s most important quantum companies — from Oxford and Cambridge spinouts now attracting nine-figure rounds to Bristol-born algorithm specialists and Glasgow hardware manufacturers building sovereign supply chains.

The National Quantum Computing Centre at Harwell has deployed all seven of its quantum testbeds, backed by £30 million through Innovate UK, giving UK companies access to real hardware validation infrastructure. This guide profiles the most significant UK-headquartered quantum companies active in 2026 across hardware, error correction, networking, security and investment. For the full global picture, the Quantum Navigator tracks over 940 companies across 47 countries and 124 categories.

Quantum Hardware Expand All Oxford Ionics Trapped-ion · Oxford, UK · Acquired by IonQ 2025 Trapped-Ion Exit · $1.075B Oxford Ionics was a trapped-ion quantum computing company founded as a spinout from the University of Oxford, developing ion-trap-on-a-chip technology that placed control electronics directly on the chip rather than relying on external laser or microwave systems. The company raised a £30 million Series A in 2023, with additional funding from the UK’s National Security Strategic Investment Fund (NSSIF), and was selected by DARPA for Stage A of the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative alongside Quantinuum. In June 2025, IonQ acquired Oxford Ionics for approximately $1.075 billion in stock and cash — one of the largest acquisitions in quantum computing history and the largest exit for a UK quantum startup to date. IonQ cited Oxford Ionics’ chip-scale ion trap architecture as a path toward systems with over two million physical qubits by 2030. The acquisition marked Oxford Ionics as the most significant UK quantum exit on record. Quantinuum Trapped-ion full-stack · Cambridge origins / Broomfield CO Trapped-Ion Private · $10B val. Quantinuum was formed in 2021 through the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum, the latter a UK company founded in Cambridge by Ilyas Khan. The combined entity is headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado, and maintains significant UK operations including R&D in Cambridge. Honeywell holds a majority stake of approximately 54%. In September 2025, Quantinuum raised $600 million at a $10 billion pre-money valuation, with investors including NVentures (NVIDIA’s venture arm), Quanta Computer, JPMorgan Chase, Mitsui and Fidelity. In January 2026, Honeywell announced that Quantinuum has filed a confidential S-1 registration statement with the SEC as a step toward a potential IPO. Sources cited a target valuation of $20 billion or more. Quantinuum builds trapped-ion quantum computers and full-stack software including the InQuanto chemistry platform. It has been selected by DARPA for Stage B of its Quantum Benchmarking Initiative and has partnerships with Microsoft, NVIDIA, SoftBank and the UK’s STFC Hartree Centre. Its published roadmap targets a universal fault-tolerant system called Apollo by 2029. OQC (Oxford Quantum Circuits) Superconducting QaaS · Reading, UK Superconducting Private · $100M+ Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC) was founded in 2017 as a spinout from Oxford University’s Department of Physics by Dr Peter Leek. The company builds superconducting quantum computers using a 3D transmon architecture called the Coaxmon, with subsequent generations named Dimon and Trimon. Its current commercial system is Toshiko. OQC has raised $100 million across a Series A (£38 million, 2022) and Series B (led by SBI Investment, 2023), with investors including the University of Tokyo Edge Capital Partners, Lansdowne Partners and Oxford Science Enterprises. In September 2025, OQC deployed a system at a Digital Realty data centre in New York integrated with NVIDIA infrastructure. In February 2026, the company published a preprint demonstrating wafer-scale packaging supporting over 500 superconducting qubits on a single 3-inch die, achieving a median T₁ of 97 μs. OQC has also worked with QinetiQ on quantum analysis of military communications networks. The company’s published roadmap targets 200 logical qubits by 2028 and 50,000 by 2034. ORCA Computing Photonic quantum computing · London, UK Photonic Private ORCA Computing was founded in 2019 as a spinout from Oxford University. The company builds photonic quantum computers that operate at or near room temperature using telecom-standard single photons stored in quantum memories. Its current product line runs from the PT-1 and PT-2 research systems through to the PT-3, which the company is targeting for commercial release in 2026 and positioning as a hybrid quantum-classical accelerator for machine learning workloads. ORCA has raised $25.1 million in total funding. The company leads the Quantum Data Centre of the Future consortium, a 14-organisation Innovate UK-backed project with BT Group, KETS, Riverlane, PQShield and ten UK universities, focused on integrating quantum and classical data centre infrastructure. ORCA is also part of the Innovate UK-funded QUICHE project alongside Riverlane and Quantum Motion, targeting quantum chemistry workflows for materials science.

Quantum Motion Silicon spin qubits · London, UK Silicon Spin Private Quantum Motion was founded by Professor John Morton (UCL) and Professor Simon Benjamin (Oxford) and is developing silicon spin qubits — an approach that uses CMOS fabrication processes compatible with the existing semiconductor industry. The company is part of the Innovate UK-backed QUICHE project, a UK-Germany collaboration with Riverlane and quantum chemistry firm FACCTs to build end-to-end workflows for materials science simulation. In February 2026, Quantum Motion established a European subsidiary in San Sebastian, Spain. The company is backed by IP Group and Cambridge Innovation Capital, and is among the companies working with hardware deployed at the NQCC testbed at Harwell. Quantcore Quantum hardware manufacturing · Glasgow, UK Superconducting Seed · £2.5M Quantcore spun out of the University of Glasgow in August 2025, operating from the James Watt Nanofabrication Centre. The company manufactures niobium-based superconducting quantum components including processors, resonators and sensors. In February 2026, Quantcore raised £2.5 million in seed funding co-led by PXN Ventures, Blackfinch Ventures and Scottish Enterprise, with additional participation from Quantum Exponential and STAC. Customers at time of funding include UK national laboratories. The company plans to grow from four to twelve employees over 18 months, with roles across design, manufacturing and cryogenic testing.

Quantum Error Correction Riverlane Quantum error correction · Cambridge, UK QEC / Middleware Series C · $75M Riverlane was founded in 2016 by Steve Brierley as a Cambridge University spinout. The company builds quantum error correction technology, with its core product being the Deltaflow QEC stack — a middleware layer that processes error syndrome data from quantum hardware in real time. Riverlane has partnerships with over 60% of the world’s quantum computer companies including Rigetti, IQM and the NQCC, and its decoder is designed to work across all major qubit modalities. The company raised $75 million in a Series C round led by Planet First Partners, with participation from Cambridge Innovation Capital, Amadeus Capital Partners, the UK National Security Strategic Investment Fund and Altair. In November 2025, Riverlane published the QEC Report 2025, which found that 120 peer-reviewed QEC papers were published in the first ten months of 2025 (up from 36 in 2024) and warned of a global talent shortage of up to 16,000 QEC specialists needed by 2030. Riverlane is also a partner in the QUICHE project alongside ORCA Computing and Quantum Motion, and has a technical integration with OQC for fault-tolerant hardware development. The company’s 2026 outlook identifies early fault-tolerant systems as the key milestone for the year ahead.

Quantum Networking Nu Quantum Quantum networking stack · Cambridge, UK Networking Series A · $60M Nu Quantum is a Cambridge spinout founded by Dr Carmen Palacios-Berraquero, developing a quantum networking stack to connect individual quantum processors into a distributed computing fabric. In December 2025, the company raised $60 million — the largest early-stage quantum funding round in the UK to date. In February 2026, Nu Quantum opened Europe’s first industrial trapped-ion networking laboratory in Cambridge, dedicated to developing the hardware layer for connecting quantum processors over a network. The funding supports product development and international expansion including European and US operations. Nu Quantum’s technical approach targets the scaling challenge facing quantum hardware: rather than building a single monolithic processor with millions of qubits, its networking stack enables smaller processors to be linked together. Quantum Security and Cryptography PQShield Post-quantum cryptography · Oxford, UK PQC / Hardware Series B PQShield was founded in Oxford and develops hardware and software implementations of the NIST post-quantum cryptographic standards, with a focus on chip-level deployment for IoT devices, automotive systems and critical infrastructure. The company has reached Series B stage, with investors including Addition, Oxford Science Enterprises and Elk VC. PQShield is a partner in the Quantum Data Centre of the Future consortium led by ORCA Computing and backed by Innovate UK, where it demonstrated a hybrid QKD/PQC link and entropy-as-a-service with KETS Quantum Security. PQShield’s technology targets the transition market created by the global rollout of NIST’s PQC standards, which require cryptographic processors across governments, financial institutions and connected devices to be updated or replaced. KETS Quantum Security Quantum key distribution · Bristol, UK QKD Private KETS Quantum Security is a Bristol-based company developing integrated-photonics QKD hardware for fibre-optic networks. QKD distributes cryptographic keys using quantum states such that any interception attempt is detectable. KETS is a partner in the Quantum Data Centre of the Future project alongside ORCA Computing, Riverlane, PQShield and BT Group, where it led the architecture and communications work and demonstrated a joint hybrid QKD/PQC point-to-point link with PQShield at BT’s Adastral Park R&D centre.

Quantum Dice Quantum random number generation · Oxford, UK QRNG Seed Quantum Dice is an Oxford University spinout developing quantum random number generation (QRNG) hardware. Its DISC (Device-Independent Source Certification) protocol continuously verifies the quantum origin of the randomness being generated in real time, rather than relying on post-hoc validation. The company targets applications in financial services, gaming, Monte Carlo simulation and cryptographic key generation where independently certifiable randomness is a regulatory or contractual requirement. Quantum Dice has raised seed funding and is developing commercial partnerships in sectors requiring NIST-compliant QRNG certification.

Crypto Quantique Quantum-driven IoT security · London, UK IoT Security Private Crypto Quantique is a London-based company whose QDID technology uses quantum tunnelling behaviour in semiconductor devices to generate unique, unclonable device identities for IoT security without external key injection. Its QuarkLink platform manages device onboarding, certificate lifecycle and key management at scale. The company has disclosed partnerships with semiconductor IP providers and IoT platform vendors.

Arqit Quantum Quantum-safe key agreement · London, UK Post-Quantum NASDAQ · ARQQ Arqit Quantum (NASDAQ: ARQQ) is a London-founded quantum security company that listed on NASDAQ via SPAC in 2021. The company’s core product is Symmetric Key Agreement software, which delivers quantum-safe encryption keys to endpoints without relying on the computational difficulty assumptions that quantum computers could eventually break. It is the only UK-originating quantum technology company currently publicly traded on a major exchange. Arqit has pursued enterprise and government customer deployments across the UK, US and allied defence markets. Quantum Software and Algorithms Phasecraft Quantum algorithms · Bristol and London, UK Algorithms Private Phasecraft was co-founded by University of Bristol professors Ashley Montanaro and Toby Cubitt. The company develops quantum algorithms for near-term hardware, with published research demonstrating resource reductions in quantum simulation algorithms for materials science. Phasecraft has partnerships with quantum hardware providers and has received funding from IP Group and the National Security Strategic Investment Fund. SEEQC Quantum-classical chips · New York / London, UK Quantum Chips SPAC · $1B val. SEEQC develops cryogenic digital chips for quantum computing using Single Flux Quantum (SFQ) logic — integrating control, readout and error correction functions onto chips that operate inside the cryostat alongside qubits. The technology is designed to be qubit-modality agnostic, addressing the wiring and latency bottlenecks that constrain current quantum systems. SEEQC is headquartered in New York but has a significant UK operation led by co-founder and Chief Product Officer Dr Matthew Hutchings, who is based in London. In March 2025, SEEQC installed a cross-qubit scaling platform at the NQCC at Harwell — the first of its kind in the UK — and was awarded a £2.7 million Q Missions Pilot grant from Innovate UK for a full-stack QEC readout testbed. SEEQC raised $30 million in a Series A extension in January 2025, bringing total funding to $62 million. In January 2026, the company announced a merger agreement with Allegro Merger Corp at a $1 billion valuation, with a $65 million PIPE, expected to close Q2 2026. SEEQC has published collaborations with NVIDIA, IBM under DARPA’s QBI programme, Booz Allen Hamilton and Rigetti, and leads the UK-supported QuPharma project with BASF and Merck on quantum drug discovery. Aegiq Photonic quantum computing · Sheffield, UK Photonic Private · ~$12M raised Aegiq is a full-stack photonic quantum computing company founded in 2019 as a spinout from the University of Sheffield. Its architecture combines compound-semiconductor single-photon sources, high-speed optical switching, silicon-nitride quantum processing units and superconducting detectors, connected via optical fibre in a modular rack-mounted format. The company’s Lightworks Python SDK gives users cloud-based access to run quantum circuits on its hardware remotely. Aegiq was selected as one of the seven hardware providers for the National Quantum Computing Centre at Harwell — the only photonics-based system in the NQCC cohort — and commissioned its Artemis system at the NQCC in late 2025, completing all technical and integration milestones. In April 2025, Aegiq and BT demonstrated a Quantum Link Assurance System (QLAS) at BT’s Adastral Park facility — a fibre-optic network integrity sensor developed under a UKRI-funded programme. The company has also partnered with the Royal Navy’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer on quantum-enhanced UAV route optimisation. Aegiq has raised approximately $12.4 million to date, with backers including Innovate UK, High-Tech Gründerfonds and VIGO Ventures. M Squared Neutral atom computing & quantum photonics · Glasgow, UK Neutral Atom Private M Squared is a Glasgow-based photonics and quantum technology company founded in 2006 by Dr Graeme Malcolm OBE and Dr Gareth Maker. Its SolsTiS laser platform is used in more than 90% of active cold-matter-based quantum computing projects globally, making it a critical infrastructure supplier for the broader quantum hardware sector. In November 2022, M Squared unveiled Maxwell — the UK’s first commercial neutral atom quantum computing system — developed in collaboration with the University of Strathclyde’s SQuAre EPSRC Prosperity Partnership. Maxwell uses Rydberg atom arrays controlled via precision laser systems, with subsequent published results demonstrating the first weighted graph optimisation on a Rydberg array using annealing with local light-shift weighting. Alongside quantum computing, M Squared produces commercial quantum sensors including the UK’s first quantum gravimeter and quantum accelerometer, positioning it as one of the UK’s most diversified quantum hardware companies. The company operates a dedicated Quantum Centre at the University of Strathclyde’s Glasgow City Innovation District, supported by a £2.9 million R&D grant from Scottish Enterprise.

Universal Quantum Trapped-ion modular · Haywards Heath, UK Trapped-Ion Private · £100M+ Universal Quantum was founded in 2018 as a spinout from the University of Sussex by Professor Winfried Hensinger and Dr Sebastian Weidt. The company’s UK R&D headquarters are in Haywards Heath, Sussex. Its approach to trapped-ion computing uses microwave fields rather than lasers to control individual ions, combined with a modular chip architecture where separate quantum computing modules are connected via electric-field links. The iQPU chip is fabricated on a standard 200mm commercial semiconductor foundry line. In 2022, Universal Quantum’s German subsidiary was awarded a €67 million contract from the German Aerospace Center (DLR) — the largest government quantum computing contract awarded to a UK startup — to build two quantum systems including a multi-module, fault-tolerant machine targeting 99.99% gate fidelity. The company has raised close to £100 million in combined public and private funding and has active operations in the US, Germany, Japan, Denmark and Australia. It holds multiple Innovate UK-backed contracts in the UK. Quantum Sensing QLM Technology Quantum gas lidar · Cardiff and Bristol, UK Quantum Sensing Series A · £12M QLM Technology was founded at the University of Bristol’s Quantum Technology Enterprise Centre and develops quantum gas lidar systems for continuous greenhouse gas emissions monitoring. Its cameras use single-photon detection and tunable diode lidar to detect, locate and quantify methane leaks at industrial facilities — oil and gas infrastructure, pipelines, landfills and wastewater — from up to 200 metres. QLM raised £12 million in a Series A round led by Schlumberger (now SLB), with participation from Quantum Exponential Group and the Development Bank of Wales, alongside a collaboration agreement giving SLB access to QLM’s technology for its End-to-end Emissions Solutions business. In April 2025, QLM announced a strategic partnership with Project Canary, an emissions measurement platform, to expand methane monitoring capabilities for US gas distribution companies. QLM also holds an Innovate UK award for the UP-SENSE project, developing next-generation quantum gas sensors using photon up-conversion and single-photon avalanche detectors.

Quantum Investment Infrastructure IP Group Most significant long-term UK quantum investor with positions in OQC, Quantum Motion and multiple university spinouts. Provides patient capital over long development periods — structurally well-suited to quantum timelines.

Cambridge Innovation Capital Key Cambridge ecosystem investor with Riverlane among its notable quantum holdings. Works alongside Amadeus Capital Partners in early and growth-stage quantum deals.

Molten Ventures London-based VC with growing exposure to UK quantum and deep-tech companies through its broader technology portfolio, complementing the more quantum-specialist funds above. Explore the Full Quantum Ecosystem The Quantum Navigator tracks over 940 quantum companies across 47 countries and 124 categories — completely free.

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