From Southport to Scale: The Gold Coast Logistics Startup You Need to Know About This Month
A homegrown supply-chain AI platform is turning heads with a $12 million Series A round, positioning itself to reshape how regional businesses manage inventory.
Buried in a converted warehouse on Scarborough Street in Southport, a five-year-old startup called LogiFlow is quietly rewriting the rules for mid-market logistics across the Asia-Pacific region. This month, the company announced a $12 million Series A funding round led by Melbourne-based venture capital firm Altitude Partners—and it's the kind of win that signals the Gold Coast's growing credibility as more than just a tourism and property destination.
LogiFlow's core product is deceptively simple: an AI-powered inventory and supply-chain management platform designed specifically for businesses operating across multiple warehouses and regional distribution hubs. Founder Sarah Chen, who cut her teeth managing logistics for a major retail chain before relocating to the Coast, saw the gap in the market when small and mid-sized enterprises couldn't afford enterprise-grade solutions like SAP or Oracle, yet were losing thousands monthly to inefficient stock management.
"What we've built is transparency at a fraction of the cost," the pitch goes. The platform integrates with existing systems, uses machine learning to forecast demand patterns, and has reportedly helped clients reduce carrying costs by an average of 18 percent within six months of deployment. Early customers include a furniture distributor in Brisbane, a wine importer in Melbourne, and several fast-moving consumer goods companies across Queensland.
Why this matters now: the regional logistics sector is experiencing a rare confluence of pressures. Supply-chain disruptions from the past five years have made businesses desperate for better visibility. Labour shortages in warehousing have pushed automation higher up the priority list. And venture capital is finally looking beyond coastal tech hubs—a shift accelerated by rising commercial rents in Sydney and Melbourne.
LogiFlow's funding round is notable not just for its size, but for who's backing it. Altitude Partners' decision to lead from Melbourne signals confidence that Gold Coast companies can attract serious capital. The Series A will fund product expansion, hiring (the team is growing from 22 to 45 people) and an aggressive push into Southeast Asia, where similar platforms command healthy premiums.
The startup joins a small but growing cohort of Gold Coast-based tech firms—including cybersecurity outfit SecureNet and fintech player PaymentFlow—proving the city is more than a one-trick pony. With office space more abundant than in Sydney, and talent increasingly willing to trade the commute for beachside living, expect more founders to set up shop along the M1 corridor.
LogiFlow's story isn't just about one company. It's evidence that the Gold Coast's tech ecosystem is maturing beyond freelancers and small agencies into something resembling a real pipeline for venture-backed growth companies.
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