Indian Startup Avataar Launches Low-Cost Video AI Model to Rival Global Giants
Avataar, the Indian startup founded by former investment banker Raghavender Tammareddy, has launched a low-cost video AI model aimed at a market where global leaders in generative video have largely set the terms so far. According to Bloomberg and TechCrunch, the company is positioning its product as a homegrown alternative built for India’s price sensitivity, speed demands, and cultural context.
TechCrunch reported that Avataar’s distilled video model is priced at $0.005 per second of generation, a level the company says is meant to make video creation far more affordable for Indian users and businesses. Bloomberg described the launch as one of India’s first domestic video AI platforms to enter a field dominated by US and Chinese services, underscoring how unusual it remains for an Indian company to compete directly in this segment.
The company is not only competing on cost. As reported by TechCrunch, Avataar is also emphasizing faster generation and what it calls cultural awareness, suggesting that the model is tuned to better handle Indian use cases, languages, and references than generic global tools. That could matter for advertisers, creators, and small businesses that want videos tailored to local audiences without paying premium international pricing.
The launch comes as AI video tools remain expensive relative to ordinary software subscriptions. In the broader market, many AI video products still charge monthly fees or usage-based rates that can add up quickly, according to pricing comparisons from other providers. Avataar’s per-second pricing is designed to stand out in that environment by making experimentation and high-volume production cheaper.
Bloomberg said the company was founded by a former banker, a detail that reflects the mix of finance and technology talent increasingly moving into India’s AI startup scene. Its entry also points to a larger trend: domestic companies trying to build AI infrastructure that is not only technically competitive but also aligned with local market needs.
What happens next will depend on whether Avataar can convert its price advantage and India-focused design into adoption at scale. For Indian creators and businesses, the launch offers a sign that video AI is becoming more accessible; for the global industry, it is another reminder that competition is widening beyond the US and China.