The
Startup
Portfolio.
Every team here started with us — filter by program, cohort and sector.
Startup portfolio
Impact
What 300+ startups have become
The tiles above show who started here. Now the impact behind them — in numbers, programs and sectors.
Context
What does an incubator do?
An incubator is a protected space for a while. You arrive as a founder with an idea — and get the conditions in which it can become a validated business model: coaching, workspace, a network and, above all, time to experiment before the market judges. That’s exactly what sets incubation apart from accelerators and venture capital: what counts here isn’t a quick return, but a viable company.
The Startup Incubator Berlin is the founders’ center of HWR Berlin — its mission is education and transfer, not equity. That’s why it supports teams without taking shares: 0% equity — what you build is yours. The numbers you’re about to see are the result of that logic: teams that could find out, without pressure, whether their idea holds.
The track record
- 293Startups supportedsince 2015
- 6Support programsBSS, Startup Now, EXIST & EXIST Women, BSS Women, React Startup Stipendium
- 15Sectorsfrom health to e-commerce
- 600+Foundersin the supported teams
- 0 %Equitysupport without taking shares
Background
15 years, one mission
What is now called a founders’ center started small — 15 years ago, with a handful of teams and a lot of persuasion. It has grown into an institution: 300 startups, supported from the first sketch to a viable company. The curve below shows why continuity matters more than any single lighthouse: one cohort of six teams makes no headlines — twelve cohorts in a row change a university.
New teams arrive every year, and every year new know-how stays in the house: methods that prove themselves get passed on — what doesn’t work gets dropped. It’s this repetition, not one spectacular success story, that makes a founders’ center resilient. So read the curve not as a growth story, but as evidence of staying power.
From 6 to 293
Cumulative number of supported startups — each point a cohort, each step new teams.
Programs
6 programs, many entry points
Being ready to start isn’t a switch, it’s a path — and at every point you need something different. Startup Now is the entry before you launch: free coaching, a workspace and workshops for teams still sharpening their idea. The Berlin Startup Scholarship then takes the pressure off — €2,500 per person per month, for six months, extendable up to twelve. BSS Women was a dedicated track of the same scholarship for women founders. And the EXIST Startup Grant brings federal funding to the university — for technology- and knowledge-based ventures, up to twelve months, supported by an academic mentor.
All four share one method: build, measure, learn — the lean-startup loop that turns assumptions into solid insight.
Different stages of maturity need different formats — the method stays the same.
6 paths to starting up
Each dot is a supported startup, colored by program — 6 programs in the portfolio. ↑ Click a bar to filter the portfolio above.
Portfolio logic
Breadth, not a bet
A thematic fund bets on one sector and hopes the bet pays off. A university incubator works the other way around: it takes the ideas that students, alumni and researchers actually bring — and those come from every direction. That’s why below you’ll find 15 sectors in a portfolio of 300 teams. This breadth is no accident, it’s by design: supporting across sectors reflects what a university really moves — instead of filtering for whatever is currently in fashion.
Still, focal points emerge: health and food & nutrition lead with 21 teams each, education follows with 15 — together almost half the portfolio. So read the chip wall as a map, not a ranking: each sector stands for problems teams have worked on here.
From health to e-commerce
15 sectors in the portfolio — the number in each badge is how many startups are in that sector. ↑ Click a chip to filter the portfolio above.
Openness
Transparency as a principle
Many portfolios show only the showcase cases. Here you see them all: every one of the 300 teams from twelve cohorts, from the first ones to the latest additions. That’s intentional — a founders’ center at a public university owes an account of what came out of its support, not just the highlights. And for you, the full list is more honest than any polished success rate: it shows what starting up really looks like.
Dive into the table: filter by cohort, program or sector, search the full text for keywords and click through to the team profiles. You might find a startup working on exactly your problem — or one whose path resembles yours.
Outlook
To be continued
300 stories — and the next one isn’t written yet. The portfolio grows with every cohort, and every one of these startups began exactly the same way: with an idea and the decision to take it seriously. If you’re at the point where a thought could become a real venture, it’s worth a look at the current programs — from open coaching to a scholarship. What the incubator offers for that, you’ll find under our offer. The rest begins, as always, with the first step.


















































































































































































































