
Deepnote is an AI-powered data workspace designed for teams, enabling collaborative data analysis and the creation of data apps and dashboards. It supports multiple languages like Python, SQL, and R, and integrates with over 50 data sources including Snowflake and BigQuery. Key features include AI suggestions for code generation and analysis, interactive visualizations, and the ability to deploy notebooks as APIs or run them on powerful GPUs. Deepnote emphasizes collaboration through features like commenting, versioning, and easy sharing via links. Security is a priority, with compliance for HIPAA, SOC 2, GDPR, and features like RBAC, SSO, and directory sync. The platform is used by hundreds of thousands of data professionals and is adopted by students at 96 out of the top 100 universities.

Deepnote is an AI-powered data workspace designed for teams, enabling collaborative data analysis and the creation of data apps and dashboards. It supports multiple languages like Python, SQL, and R, and integrates with over 50 data sources including Snowflake and BigQuery. Key features include AI suggestions for code generation and analysis, interactive visualizations, and the ability to deploy notebooks as APIs or run them on powerful GPUs. Deepnote emphasizes collaboration through features like commenting, versioning, and easy sharing via links. Security is a priority, with compliance for HIPAA, SOC 2, GDPR, and features like RBAC, SSO, and directory sync. The platform is used by hundreds of thousands of data professionals and is adopted by students at 96 out of the top 100 universities.
Product: Collaborative, Jupyter-compatible cloud notebook and data-science IDE
Founded: 2019
Headquarters: San Francisco, CA
Funding (reported): $23.8M total (seed + Series A)
Key investors: Index Ventures, Accel, Y Combinator, Credo Ventures
Collaborative data analysis, data apps/dashboards, and team-oriented data science workflows
2019
Data science / developer tools
$3,800,000
$20,000,000
“Index Ventures, Accel, Y Combinator, Credo Ventures (institutional investors) and participation from angel/backers”