Reclaim Security Raises $20M Series A Funding to Automate Exposure Remediation Across Enterprise Security Stacks
Most cybersecurity teams live in a strange reality. The alarms are loud, the dashboards glow like Times Square, and the reports pile up higher than a New York deli sandwich. Yet the actual fix, the moment where a vulnerability gets shut down for good, moves at the speed of corporate gravity. Attackers break out in about 27 seconds. Enterprises often need 27 days to respond. That gap is not just a statistic. It is open space. And in cybersecurity, open space is an invitation.
Reclaim Security looked at that gap and decided the real problem was not detection. The world already has enough blinking lights. The problem is the last mile, the moment where security teams must actually fix something without accidentally shutting down payroll, logistics, or the CEO’s laptop five minutes before a board meeting. That tension between safety and disruption is where most remediation quietly dies. Reclaim Security is building technology that makes that moment less terrifying and a lot more automatic.
Now the market is leaning in. Reclaim Security has secured $20M in Series A funding led by Acrew Capital, with participation from QP Ventures and returning investor Ibex Investors. That brings total funding to $26M. Congratulations to Co-Founder & CEO Barak Klinghofer and Co-Founder & CPO Roy Peretz for steering this one with clarity and precision. Respect as well to Co-Founder & VP Engineering Yaniv Waksman and Co-Founder & VP Research Or Virnik, the builders turning theory into machinery that actually runs inside enterprise environments.
The engine behind the platform is something called PIPE, the Productivity Impact Prediction Engine. It sounds like plumbing, which is appropriate because cybersecurity has always had a leak problem. PIPE simulates how fixes will behave inside a company’s environment before anything touches production. It studies users, systems, dependencies, and the messy logic that keeps large organizations alive. Then it recommends remediations that close exposure without blowing up the business side of the house.
That approach changes the math. Early deployments report up to an 80% increase in overall threat resilience, a 75% boost in ROI from existing security stacks, and about a 90% reduction in manual remediation work. When you think about how many security teams still run on spreadsheets, tickets, and late night guesswork, those numbers land like a cold drink after a long shift.
The name Reclaim Security fits the moment. For years, defenders have been reacting while attackers dictated the tempo. Reclaim suggests something different. Take the time back. Take the control back. Close the 27 day gap before the next 27 seconds arrive. And if the market keeps moving in this direction, the companies that master remediation will not just detect the problem. They will quietly erase it.









