Innovate UK has announced the winners of its inaugural Agentic AI Pioneers Prize, a major step in the government’s strategy to make Britain a global leader in next-generation artificial intelligence. The competition, run in partnership with the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, attracted over 200 applications from high-growth sectors across the UK, showcasing innovation in healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and the creative industries.
The prize supports the development of “agentic AI” systems, which can act autonomously, collaborate with humans, and manage complex workflows. The top award of £500,000 went to Danu Insights for its Agentic Digital Twin Builder for the Life Sciences platform. The technology enables researchers to simulate biological systems and identify promising experimental pathways, integrating modelling, validation, and experiment planning into a single platform. The judges noted its potential to speed up drug discovery and biomanufacturing while reducing costs and improving sustainability.
Two additional awards of £250,000 were granted to companies in advanced manufacturing and the creative sector. In manufacturing, Singular Machine was recognised for CoEngen, a multi-agent engineering platform that coordinates design processes across disciplines using shared data models. The system allows engineers to optimise complex systems quickly while ensuring traceability and safety standards.
In the creative sector, Tellme received an award for its solution that delivers real-time, personalised museum experiences via smartphones. Visitors can interact dynamically with exhibits and receive tailored information without additional hardware, transforming audience engagement in cultural spaces.
Agentic AI marks a shift from traditional automation toward systems that can take initiative, adapt to changing conditions, and collaborate with human users. Applications extend from industrial design and regulatory compliance to clinical decision-making and immersive digital experiences. The competition demonstrates how these technologies are moving beyond research labs into practical, real-world solutions.
Sara El-Hanfy, head of AI and machine learning at Innovate UK, said the prize aims to help promising companies transition from early-stage innovation to scalable deployment. “Our ambition is to support the companies set to shape the future of agentic AI and unlock its potential to drive growth across key sectors,” she said.
The initiative is part of a broader government strategy to position the UK at the forefront of AI development, particularly in sectors where advanced technologies can deliver economic and societal benefits. By targeting healthcare, manufacturing, and creative industries, the programme aligns with the UK’s industrial priorities, focusing on areas where research strength meets commercial potential.
The Agentic AI Pioneers Prize highlights how UK startups are beginning to translate cutting-edge research into practical applications. For Innovate UK, the challenge will be to ensure these early successes scale into competitive global businesses, reinforcing the country’s standing in the intensifying global race for AI leadership.
