14 million poorly insulated German homes: VARM raises €17.5 million to expand its installer network
VARM, a Berlin-based startup training and deploying insulation specialists, has raised €17.5 million in a Series A funding round to expand its scalable home insulation model across Germany and, eventually, Europe.
The round was led by ABN AMRO Sustainable Impact Fund and co-led by GET Fund, with participation from Aurum Impact and existing investors Emerge Partners, Pale Blue Dot, Emerge VC and noa.
“Insulating Europe’s buildings is proven, fast, cheap and unbelievable effective. The hard part is doing it at scale, building by building. That’s the company we always have been building. Now we’re building the team to match the speed for our next phase,” said Christian Gruener, CEO and co-founder in a public statement.
VARM’s Series A sits within a 2026 pattern of funding for companies working on the building-sector energy transition, including renovation execution, heat pumps, metering, real-estate energy systems, heating and cooling, and portfolio risk tools.
The closest domestic comparables are also Berlin-based: ecoworks raised €23 million for serial building renovation, GALVANY raised €10 million for heat-pump deployment in existing multi-family buildings, and metiundo raised €40 million for smart metering and building-sector energy data.
This indicates that Germany remains a visible centre of capital allocation in this segment.
Compared with software- or hardware-led approaches, VARM’s round is focused on the labour and deployment layer of insulation, addressing installer capacity as a practical constraint on residential energy-efficiency upgrades.
Founded in 2023 by CEO Christian Grüner, a mathematician and former Siemens Advanta professional, and COO Sebastian Würz, who previously co-founded homefully, later acquired by Habyt, VARM is tackling one of Europe’s less visible climate bottlenecks: the lack of trained workers able to insulate homes at scale.
While Germany has a strong reputation for engineering and environmental ambition, the company outlines that around 14 million homes in the country remain poorly insulated. According to VARM, the problem is not the lack of available insulation technology, but the shortage of qualified people able to install it quickly, affordably and consistently.
VARM’s answer is a workforce and operations model it calls Cloud Installer. The startup trains career changers, including people from logistics, retail and other sectors without formal trade qualifications, as certified insulation specialists in a matter of weeks.
These workers are then deployed in regional teams, supported by VARM’s own quality control processes and fixed-price quoting model. The company says a standard single-family home can be completed in around six hours.
The model has already been tested across more than 1,000 completed installations. Since launching, VARM has expanded from one German city to seven, offering insulation for façades, roofs, ceilings and cellars.
Its services include planning, grant applications, implementation and post-consultation fixed-price offers, giving homeowners a clearer idea of cost before work begins.
VARM’s mission is to insulate 1 million houses in 10 years. The company positions itself as building a European champion for insulation by developing a local insulation network through hyper-local hubs.
Its business-in-a-box approach is designed to recruit, train and empower local installers to run their own insulation companies, while operating within VARM’s wider system for standards, quality and customer experience.
The funding arrives at a time when building efficiency is becoming increasingly important across Europe. Countries aiming to meet 2030 energy-efficiency and climate targets face a similar issue: even when demand, technology and policy support exist, deployment can stall if there are not enough skilled installers available.
VARM is betting that its model can help turn insulation from a slow, fragmented trade service into a more scalable infrastructure layer for the energy transition.
The company’s focus on career changers also gives the model a labour-market angle. By opening up insulation work to people without traditional trade backgrounds, VARM is attempting to widen the installer pipeline while creating new routes into climate-related skilled work.
For homeowners, the pitch is built around speed, regional teams, experienced craftspeople and predictable pricing.
With the new Series A funding, VARM plans to continue expanding its regional network and strengthen the infrastructure behind its installer training and deployment model. The company has previously raised more than €6.75 million to support its mission, and this latest round gives it a larger platform to address what it sees as a continent-wide insulation gap.
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