New analysis reveals that female-founded scaleups in Scotland grow at twice the UK national average, yet persistent challenges in funding, talent acquisition, and support hinder progress. The Female Founder Scottish Index identifies 139 such businesses, each surpassing £10 million in revenue or £5 million in assets. These companies collectively produce £1.5 billion in revenue and employ more than 16,000 people, with 47% located outside Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Strong Growth and Regional Spread
Scotland ranks seventh among 12 UK regions for female-founded scaleups. These firms demonstrate strength across traditional and industrial sectors. The findings emerged during the Pathways Forward ‘Pathways Pledge’ annual review in Edinburgh, where over 40 organizations committed to more than 100 pledges to boost gender diversity and support women entrepreneurs.
Key Challenges for Female Founders
Nearly 80% of female founders scaling businesses report inadequate support, compared to 40% of male-led counterparts. Gaps appear most acutely in accessing talent, non-executive directors, markets, and investors.
Investment Trends
Women-led scaling firms have secured £117 million in equity funding so far, marking an 80% rise from last year. However, this capital concentrates in few companies, leaving many to bootstrap or turn to traditional financing.
Sector Breakdown
Women helm scaleups in diverse fields: healthcare and wellbeing (32%), retail (25%), hospitality (23%), property and construction (23%), professional services (21%), advanced manufacturing (8%), digital and technology (8%), education (7%), and transport (6%).
Insights from Leaders
Irene Graham OBE, CEO of the ScaleUp Institute, stated: “It is terrific to see the growth and longevity of female founded and co-founded scaling businesses in Scotland and the strength not only in traditional but industrial sectors. It is clear that the Pathways Pledge remains as vital as ever as we seek to address long established scaleup gaps and access to funding and markets that Scottish female founders need. There is significant opportunity for our Scottish female scaling entrepreneurs. They are clear about the actions needed to further propel their growth, which we must continue to act on.”
Ana Stewart, Founder of Pathways Forward and Scotland’s Chief Entrepreneur, noted: “The report marks an important step forward in understanding how female founded businesses are scaling and where we must go further, but the data also tells a more challenging story. Investment remains concentrated in a small number of firms. Many continue to rely on bootstrapping and traditional finance rather than growth equity. So, we must widen access to growth capital and increase the participation of women across the investment landscape.”
She added: “What is notable is that we have so many incredible women-founded businesses here, they are growing quickly, and we should all be encouraged by this as it will ultimately lead to increased economic benefit for Scotland.”
Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes emphasized: “The Female Founder Scottish Index highlights significant achievements of our women-led businesses growing and developing in Scotland, the incredible talent that lies behind these success stories and the clear economic opportunity that will come from ensuring we help more businesses to scale up, attract further investment and stay and flourish in Scotland. This valuable analysis also shows there is more to do to support female founders. The Scottish Government stands squarely behind the excellent work being undertaken across the public and private sectors to get to the heart of tackling under-representation in our business community but this must serve as a call to arms to accelerate our efforts. It must be our collective mission to continue to break down barriers for women in business and provide the right support to ensure we unlock their full potential.”
Marie Owen OBE, Founder and CEO of LS Productions—a major UK independent production services firm based in Edinburgh with hubs in London and Manchester—observed: “In today’s economic climate, scaleups are critical to national resilience. Businesses like ours are already exporting, employing at scale, and generating significant revenue, yet the policy and funding focus still leans heavily towards startups. My experience scaling LS Productions has shown me that growth at this level requires more than ambition, it demands access to senior talent, digital capability, and international market infrastructure. The creative industries in particular are often underestimated, despite being powerful drivers of IP, inward investment, and global competitiveness. If we want the economy to thrive, we need to back the companies that are already delivering measurable impact.”

