Rs 100 Cr ARR in 8 years: How Ugaoo is cultivating India's modern gardening movement

Over the last three years, Pune-based Ugaoo, an urban gardening brand, has fulfilled over 1 million orders with an average order value of Rs 1,200. It plans to expand its cultivation to 100 acres by 2026, aiming to grow 5 lakh plants monthly.

Apr 23, 2025 - 02:30
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Rs 100 Cr ARR in 8 years: How Ugaoo is cultivating India's modern gardening movement

When Siddhant Bhalinge returned to India in 2015 after studying landscape architecture in the US, he was immediately struck by a disconnect in Indian horticulture. Unlike abroad, where plant stores were designed to inspire and educate, India’s gardening scene was fragmented between agri-stores and roadside nurseries.

“There was no experience, no structure, and certainly no education around plant care... The joy of being a plant parent was missing,” Bhalinge, Founder and CEO, Ugaoo, recalls in a conversation with YourStory.

That insight became the seed that would grow into Ugaoo, a gardening brand launched in 2016 to reconnect urban India with plants. It has now grown to become a Rs 100 crore annual recurring revenue company.

Rooted in legacy: Solving for survivability

Bhalinge hails from a family specialised in producing hybrid vegetable seeds, which gave operational knowledge of horticulture. However, he wasn’t content with simply continuing the family legacy.

“I grew up with conversations about soil health and crop yields. But I didn’t want to just continue that legacy. I wanted to translate it into something relevant for an urban, first-time plant buyer,” he explains.

The entrepreneur wanted to tap into India’s indoor plant market, which is expected to grow to $405.66 million by 2030, at a CAGR of 8.45%, according to TechSci Research.

Ugaoo began as an education-first brand, offering products as well as resources—care guides, tutorials, and beginner-friendly content—to demystify gardening.

Realising that plant survivability was central to consumer satisfaction, Ugaoo tackled upstream problems head-on. The brand invested early in backward integration and now operates a 25-acre production facility in Talegaon, Maharashtra, with 36 automated polyhouses simulating optimal climate conditions.

“Each plant species has its own soil and fertiliser formula, designed after years of R&D. Our goal was simple: reduce plant mortality, reduce consumer effort, and increase long-term satisfaction,” says Bhalinge.

Ugaoo Team

Ugaoo Team

Operational rigor as a growth engine

Over the last three years, the Pune-based startup has fulfilled over 1 million orders, with an average order value of Rs 1,200. It offers free shipping above Rs 500 and a one-month, no-questions-asked replacement policy.

“If a plant is damaged in transit or affected by weather, we take full responsibility. That layer of post-sale trust converts a one-time customer into a repeat one,” the founder explains.

Started with Rs 1 crore in bootstrap capital, Ugaoo now employs over 550 people—with 170 in corporate roles and 350+ on-ground across farms and warehouses.

As of FY24, Ugaoo says it is growing at a 60-70% YoY rate, with a 45% retention rate over 24 months and 36% monthly repeat purchase rate.

A thoughtfully designed product ecosystem

Ugaoo’s catalogue features over 1,500 SKUs—including live plants, seeds, tools, fertilisers, lifestyle accessories, and sustainable gifts. It has put in place logistics and quality control systems to ensure consistency.

To solve delivery-related challenges, Ugaoo developed patented plant packaging that can keep plants alive for up to 10 days in transit and withstand 5,200 kg of vertical pressure.

“Shipping a plant is not the same as shipping a book. We designed systems to reduce transit stress on both the plant and the buyer,” he notes.

Even though Ugaoo doesn’t manufacture pots, it controls the design and vendor quality, working with ceramics artisans in Hyderabad and using proprietary molds for plastic pots.

“Our innovations, like slow-release fertilisers and self-watering pots, solve real problems—these aren’t fancy gimmicks,” Bhalinge adds.

Omnichannel expansion

Ugaoo sells through its website and mobile app, along with ecommerce and quick commerce platforms including Amazon, Flipkart, JioMart, Zepto, and Swiggy. It also operates 10 offline stores in Mumbai, Pune, and Bengaluru—with plans to scale to 80 locations by FY30.

The brand’s offline stores are experiential spaces where customers can deeply engage with plants through hands-on workshops and interactive sessions. 

“We do workshops on urban gardening, plant care, repotting, and sustainability, along with immersive experiences like plant walks, terrarium-making, and sensory corners,” he explains.

It also caters to 120+ corporate clients across Mumbai and Pune. Overall, it handles office plant maintenance and fulfilling gifting orders for over 800 corporates—which contributes to 9% of its total revenue.

To enhance last-mile logistics, Ugaoo is developing regional hubs in Chennai, Kolkata, and Ahmedabad.

Shifting consumer trends 

In November 2024, Ugaoo raised Rs 47 crore in Series A funding, led by V3 Ventures, with participation from DSG Consumer Partners and RPG Ventures.

“We’re not scaling for visibility. We’re investing in people, tech infrastructure, and horticultural science. It’s about laying the groundwork for a platform that will endure—and grow,” Bhalinge says.

The pandemic accelerated interest in home gardening, particularly among urban millennials and women aged 25 to 60, who now form Ugaoo’s core demographic.

“People turned to plants as a way to cope. Balconies became green sanctuaries. That emotional engagement with gardening is central to how we think about our brand,” he reflects.

Despite competition from players like Nurserylive, PaudheWale, and Urvaan, Bhalinge believes Ugaoo’s vertical integration is its true differentiator.

“We’re not just another plant delivery service. We grow nearly all our plants, design soil, packaging, and care systems ourselves. That control ensures plant health and consistent customer experience,” he adds.

The road ahead

Ugaoo plans to expand its offerings to include outdoor furniture, barbeque grills, and gardening tools, but its core ethos remains unchanged.

“We still have a long way to go. This is about more than revenue or reach. It’s about creating something that brings people closer to nature—and to themselves—one plant at a time,” Bhalinge concludes.

The brand plans to expand its cultivation to 100 acres by 2026, with an aim to grow 5 lakh plants monthly.


Edited by Kanishk Singh