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Based in Chicago, Illinois, Chowbus is a technology company that develops business services and optimization software for independent Asian restaurants, having originally operated as a specialized food delivery platform. The company built its initial footprint by connecting diners with regional cuisines across more than 20 North American cities before selling its consumer delivery operations to Fantuan. Prior to this strategic pivot, the enterprise secured a $33M Series A financing round in 2020, adding to $4M in earlier capital, to accelerate its geographic expansion. This institutional backing was provided by a syndicate of venture capital firms that included Altos Ventures, Left Lane Capital, and Hyde Park Angels. Today, the organization focuses exclusively on providing point-of-sale systems and operational technologies to its merchant network. Chowbus was founded in 2016 by Suyu Zhang and Linxin Wen.
Chowbus has raised $118.0M across 3 funding rounds.
Chowbus has raised $118.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Chowbus has raised $118.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Chowbus's investors include Harley Miller, Kerry Wei, Avidbank, Dutchess Opportunity Fund II, Fika Ventures, Left Lane Capital, Anthony Lee, Adjacent, Jonathan Becker, Ellie Wheeler, FJ Labs, Joe Beatty.
Chowbus has raised $118.0M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $81.0M Other Equity in March 2026.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 11, 2026 | $81M Venture Round | Harley Miller, Kerry WEI | Avidbank, Dutchess Opportunity Fund II, Fika Ventures | Announced |
| Jul 1, 2020 | $33M Series A | Left Lane Capital, Anthony LEE | Adjacent, Jonathan Becker, Ellie Wheeler, Fika Ventures, FJ Labs, JOE Beatty, Silicon Valley Bank | Announced |
| Jan 24, 2019 | $4M Seed | Fabrice Grinda, Greycroft | Fika Ventures, Hyde Park Angels | Announced |
Chowbus is a Chicago-based technology company that builds a full-stack restaurant technology platform tailored for Asian and ethnic mom-and-pop restaurants, evolving from a food delivery service launched in 2016.[1][2][3] It serves independent restaurant owners and diners seeking authentic Asian cuisine by providing tools like POS systems, self-ordering kiosks, online ordering, loyalty programs, kitchen display systems (KDS), and delivery integrations, solving problems such as limited tech access, high fees from mainstream platforms, and operational inefficiencies for culturally rooted businesses.[1][3][5][6] The company supports over 3,000 brands and 9,000 restaurants across U.S. cities, achieving 80% market share in key Asian neighborhoods like Flushing NYC and Chicago Chinatown, with growth fueled by $33M in Series A funding and expansions into dine-in features and new markets.[1][2]
Chowbus was founded in 2016 by CEO Linxin Wen, a master's student at the Illinois Institute of Technology, alongside co-founder and CTO Suyu Zhang.[1][2][4] Wen identified the gap when noticing that authentic Asian mom-and-pop shops in Chicago's Chinatown lacked visibility on mainstream apps like Uber Eats, inspiring a low-fee ($1) delivery service tested among college students via social media and his university.[1][2][4] Zhang, who moved from Beijing to study in Illinois, echoed this after struggling to find non-Americanized Chinese food like dim sum or bubble tea on existing platforms, leading to Chowbus's focus on blind taste-tested authentic eateries and unique bundling from multiple restaurants.[2] Early traction came from affordable delivery of genuine dishes, securing $4M seed funding in 2019 and $33M Series A, pivoting from delivery to a comprehensive tech ecosystem amid rising demand.[1][2][4]
Chowbus rides the wave of food tech democratization, addressing underserved ethnic restaurants amid a $100B+ U.S. delivery market dominated by giants like DoorDash, which overlook mom-and-pop shops with high commissions and poor adaptation to diverse cuisines.[1][2][4] Timing aligns with post-pandemic dine-in recovery and contactless tech demand, plus rising consumer preference for authentic, non-chain Asian food—undervalued yet growing via immigration and cultural shifts.[2][5] Market forces like labor shortages and fleet scaling favor its automated tools, while it influences the ecosystem by uplifting cultural anchors, fostering community resilience, and enabling scalability for small businesses in 22+ cities.[1][5][6]
Chowbus is poised to dominate ethnic restaurant tech, expanding POS and delivery beyond Asian cuisine into new cities like San Diego, Austin, and Toronto, potentially globally within years.[1][2] Trends like AI-driven ops, bundled hyper-local delivery, and inclusive fintech will propel it, challenging incumbents by prioritizing cultural equity over volume. Its influence may evolve into the default platform for 10,000+ non-chain eateries, ensuring tech growth preserves diverse flavors that mainstream apps ignore—turning overlooked stories into scalable success.[1][2][6]