All founders applying to Startup Battlefield want the same thing: Disrupt Main Stage. It takes 6 minutes to pitch and demo live in front of Silicon Valley's top investors. A dedicated TechCrunch article published as soon as you announce it. $100,000 in non-stock prizes and a shot at the Disrupt Cup.
All of these may be yours, but the path to success at Startup Battlefield all starts with your application. In fact, the deadline for this year's cohort has been extended to June 8th, so you only have a short window to submit.
Go here to launch that application now. But for a head start, here's some advice based on past contests, and some details on why participant perks start well before Disrupt's main stage begins.
What it takes to be in the Startup Battlefield Top 20
Startup Battlefield Top 20 represents the best of the Startup Battlefield 200. Companies with meaningfully different ideas that can define a category and have a significant impact on an industry or region. The selection will be based on which companies are the most attractive, differentiated and ready for the global stage.
It's all about the product and founder videos. These are first impressions and play the most important role in identifying which companies are ready for the disruption stage. Show us your product in action. Please explain specifically what makes you different. Show your beliefs on camera, not just your metrics.
Selected companies work closely with the TechCrunch team in preparing their pitches ahead of Disrupt. Each company will pitch and demo live for six minutes on the Disrupt Stage, followed by a live Q&A with top investors including Aileen Lee (Cowboy Ventures), Kirsten Green (Forerunner), Navin Chaddha (Mayfield), Chris Farmer (SignalFire), Dayna Grayson (Construct Capital), Ann Mirai-Ko (Floodgate), and Hans Tung (Notable Capital).
Five of the top 20 will be selected to pitch again on the final day of Disrupt in front of a new panel of distinguished judges. The winner will receive a non-stock prize of $100,000 and the Disrupt Cup.
Check out the top 20 of 2024 and 2025.
Image credit: TechCrunch / Slava Blazer Photo
Didn't make the top 20 initially? You're still in the running
This list will not be final until Disrupt progresses. Every year, things change. Founders drop out, schedules change, and standouts emerge quickly from the 200 companies during the program.
The top 20 companies will be kept confidential until the event begins and a shortlist of companies ready to participate will be maintained. This is done every cycle.
And more importantly, finishing in the top 200 is where your real opportunities begin. The stage is momentary. But the access, exposure, and network you gain as part of a group goes far beyond that.
What Every Battlefield 200 Startup Will Get
You don't need to be in the top 20 on Startup Battlefield to change your trajectory.
All selected companies will receive a fully-funded demo booth at TechCrunch Disrupt. Free event pass for your team. Access to pre-event virtual programming with world-class VCs, operators, and founders. Dedicated pitch preparation. and an invitation to a private Startup Battlefield reception.
All 200 companies will be participating in Disrupt. Whether you're on the Disrupt stage competing for $100,000 in prizes or the Showcase stage winning the industry's best awards, both are real opportunities to stand out in front of investors, press, and partners who come to Disrupt to find what's next.
On the editorial side, any company can join the TechCrunch ecosystem. While coverage is not guaranteed, our editors actively track Startup Battlefield companies through articles, the Build Mode podcast, the Equity podcast, and future updates as they grow. Prominent companies are often invited to pitch, speak, and revisit the TechCrunch platform. It's an opportunity that grows over time.
Additionally, you can join the Startup Battlefield alumni community. The community includes more than 1,700 companies, including Dropbox, Discord, and Cloudflare, who have collectively raised $32 billion and exited more than 250 companies. This is not a mailing list. We are a network of founders who have gone through the same experience and continue to support each other.
Graduates receive ongoing opportunities to pitch and speak at TechCrunch events, discounts and free access to future events, and exclusive benefits from our partner network.
The stage is momentary. Network, visibility, and access come last.
It’s worth it just to apply to Startup Battlefield
Even if you are not selected, there are benefits to applying. Applicants will receive special discounts on Disrupt tickets and exhibition opportunities, along with resources from our partners, so they can stay closer to the ecosystem and come back stronger next cycle.
Even if you're not sure if you're ready, apply anyway. It's free and doesn't cost anything from the table. If it's not the right time, it's our job to tell you. Founders who wait until they feel ready often wait too long.
While you're gearing up, check out Build Mode, TechCrunch's podcast for early-stage founders featuring past Startup Battlefield companies, breakout founders, and top investors. Think of this as an inside track on what it takes to build a battlefield-ready company.
[Listen to Build Mode →]
Applications close on June 8, 2026. TechCrunch Disrupt will be held October 13-15 in San Francisco.
If you think you deserve to be in the top 20, apply to Startup Battlefield 2026.
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