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Airlift was once celebrated as a symbol of Pakistan’s rising startup scene. After raising a record-breaking $85 million Series B round in 2021, the company was seen as a national success storyproof that Pakistani startups could stand on the global stage. Yet, just one year later, Airlift abruptly announced its shutdown in July 2022. This collapse shocked investors, founders, and the entire tech ecosystem.
Why did a company that had secured massive funding close so quickly?
The real reasons behind Airlift’s failure, covering business decisions, market problems, global challenges, and lessons for future entrepreneurs.
Airlift launched in 2019 with a very different business model it was a mass transit company offering affordable shared rides. The idea worked initially, but the COVID-19 pandemic halted public transportation, forcing the company to pivot.
In 2020, Airlift shifted to a new model called Airlift Express, delivering groceries and household items in 45 minutes or less. This pivot gained tremendous traction, attracting global investors and transforming Airlift into Pakistan’s fastest-growing startup.
For a moment, Airlift seemed unstoppable.
But beneath the surface, serious cracks were forming.
One of the biggest reasons Airlift shut down was the global economic downturn.
By 2022, the world was facing:
Startups that relied on continuous fundraising suddenly found themselves unable to secure fresh capital. Quick-commerce companies were hit especially hard because they required large amounts of cash to operate.
Airlift tried to raise additional funding, but global conditions made investors extremely cautious. Even deals that seemed guaranteed began to fall apart.
Without fresh capital, Airlift could not sustain its operations.
Airlift grew extremely fast too fast.
To expand quickly, the company spent huge amounts of money on:
This created a very high burn rate, meaning the company was spending far more money than it was making.
Many startups operate with high burn, but only when they can continuously raise investment. When funding slowed down, Airlift’s business model became impossible to maintain.
10–30 minute grocery delivery sounds exciting, but it is one of the most expensive and complex business models in the world.
A quick commerce company must manage:
Even global giants struggled. Startups like Gorillas, Jokr, Fridge No More, and Buyk shut down or downsized in 2022.
If these companies in wealthy economies couldn’t sustain the model, it was even harder in Pakistan, where:
Airlift was burning massive money to deliver products cheaply—and the economics simply didn’t make sense long-term.
In 2022, Pakistan was going through one of the worst financial crises in its history.
Key economic pressures included:
Airlift imported many of its goods and materials, so the currency drop increased costs significantly. Fuel price hikes made deliveries more expensive. Consumer purchasing power fell, making it even harder to maintain revenue.
The environment became too unstable for a business that relied heavily on predictable costs and tight margins.
Airlift was negotiating a major funding round in mid-2022.
Investors initially showed interest, but global market uncertainty caused several of them to back out.
The company needed millions of dollars urgently to survive the next months. Without that money, Airlift had no way to pay salaries, run warehouses, or maintain operations.
In July 2022, the company officially ran out of cash.
This led to the shutdown announcement that shocked the entire startup world.
Instead of focusing on a few strong markets, Airlift expanded aggressively into:
While expansion is good, expanding too fast can destroy a startup.
Every new city required:
This multiplied operational costs and created management pressure.
Instead of strengthening one profitable region, Airlift scaled too rapidly before stabilizing its core model.
Running a nationwide quick-commerce business requires near-perfect efficiency. Even small mistakes can create massive financial losses.
Airlift faced challenges such as:
These operational issues increased costs and reduced customer satisfaction.
In industries with thin margins, every mistake counts and Airlift made many.
Quick commerce relies on:
While Pakistan’s digital landscape is growing, it is still not at the level of markets where quick commerce thrives. Many consumers were not ready to pay extra for fast delivery.
This mismatch between market size and business model created long-term sustainability issues.
Airlift didn’t collapse because of just one mistake. It was a combination of many factors:
Airlift needed constant investment to survive, and once that investment stopped, the business simply could not sustain itself.
Airlift’s shutdown offers powerful lessons:
Expanding fast without profitability is dangerous.
High spending can destroy even well-funded companies.
Build a business that can eventually survive on its own revenue.
Not every global business model fits every country.
Long-term survival depends on economic stability.