AutoAcquire AI acquires Virtuans, a Lahore-built conversational AI startup, in a seven-figure USD deal that is being called one of the most significant cross-border tech exits Pakistan has seen in recent years. The acquisition, announced in February 2026, puts a homegrown Pakistani AI product at the centre of a US company’s push into the trillion-dollar used car market, and it raises a bigger question about what Pakistan’s startup scene still needs to grow.
What Is Virtuans AI and What Did It Build?
Virtuans AI was co-founded by Raheel Ahmad and Muddassar Sharif. The Lahore-based company built autonomous conversational AI agents designed to handle sales and customer support without human involvement. Think of them as digital workers that can talk to customers, qualify leads, follow up on messages, and manage conversations across multiple channels, all on their own.
What made Virtuans stand out technically was its use of reinforcement learning, which lets the AI get better over time through experience rather than just fixed rules. The platform also worked in over 40 languages, making it useful for businesses in different countries. Before the acquisition, the startup had found customers in real estate, hospitality, and other service-heavy industries.
All of this was built in under two years, a very short timeline for a startup to reach an exit at this level.
AutoAcquire AI Acquires Virtuans to Enter Agentic AI
AutoAcquire AI, headquartered in Florida and led by automotive software veteran Anthony Monteiro, is trying to change how car dealerships in the US buy used vehicles. Its platform connects vehicle targeting, pricing, inspections, transport, and fraud checks into one AI-driven system. The US used car market is worth around $1 trillion, and AutoAcquire wants a big piece of it by automating the acquisition process end to end.
Bringing Virtuans on board gives AutoAcquire access to ready-made AI agent technology that can handle both inbound calls and outbound outreach, essentially letting dealers talk to sellers without a human agent picking up the phone. The deal was structured as a mix of cash and equity, though the precise figures have not been made public.
Raheel Ahmad joins AutoAcquire as Head of AI Product and Muddassar Sharif as Head of AI Technology. Both founders will lead the company’s AI development from within, which is an important detail. This is not just an acqui-hire where talent is absorbed and the product shut down. The Virtuans technology is going live inside a real commercial platform.
Why This Exit Matters for Pakistan’s Startup Ecosystem
Pakistan’s tech sector gets talked about mostly in the context of IT exports and freelancers. Startup funding stories do appear, but actual exits, where a foreign company buys a Pakistani product at a real market price, are rare. This deal changes that conversation a little.
Acquisitions of product-led AI startups founded and built in Pakistan are uncommon, particularly where the core intellectual property was developed locally. Most of the time, Pakistani tech talent works for foreign companies as service providers or employees. What Virtuans did differently was build a product that a US company decided it needed to own.
That is the part that ecosystem watchers are paying attention to. A funded startup is a bet. An acquired startup is a result. Pakistan’s startup scene has seen more of the former and far fewer of the latter. Exits give the whole ecosystem something funding rounds alone cannot, proof that building a product company in Pakistan and selling it internationally is actually possible.
For founders currently building in Lahore, Karachi, or Islamabad, this deal provides a real data point. A startup can go from launch to a seven-figure international exit in less than two years if the product is strong and the market timing is right. That message matters more than any amount of grant money or incubator space.
You can read more about how Pakistan’s IT sector is performing on the global stage in our coverage of PSEB’s global tech events bringing Pakistan $73.9m in business, which shows the broader momentum behind Pakistani tech exports.
The Missing Link, Exits, Not Just Funding
Pakistan’s startup funding peaked around 2021-2022 and has since slowed. When funding dries up, founders need another path, and exits are that path. An acquisition gives founders a return, gives early employees a reward, and gives the next generation of founders a reason to start something ambitious.
Right now, too few Pakistani startups are built with an exit in mind. Many chase revenue through services because building a product is harder and takes longer. Virtuans shows a different model, focus on a specific technical problem, build proprietary IP, keep costs low (Pakistan’s engineering talent is cost-competitive globally), and let the product attract buyers on its own terms.
The government and PSEB have worked on promoting IT exports, but exit infrastructure, things like M&A advisory, legal frameworks for cross-border deals, and investor education on exit planning, is still thin. That is the next gap to close if Pakistan wants more deals like this one.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did AutoAcquire AI acquire Virtuans for?
AutoAcquire AI acquired Virtuans to bring its autonomous conversational AI agents into its automotive platform. The technology will help US car dealerships automate how they contact vehicle sellers, qualify leads, and manage acquisition conversations without relying on human staff.
How much was the Virtuans acquisition deal worth?
The deal was valued in the seven-figure USD range, paid as a mix of cash and equity. The exact amount has not been publicly disclosed by either company.
Who founded Virtuans AI and where was it based?
Virtuans AI was founded by Raheel Ahmad and Muddassar Sharif. The startup was based in Lahore, Pakistan, and was less than two years old at the time of acquisition.
Why is the AutoAcquire AI Virtuans deal important for Pakistan?
Because it is a rare example of a US company buying a Pakistan-built AI product for its intellectual property, not just hiring the team. It shows that Pakistani founders can build globally competitive products and reach successful exits, which is something the local startup ecosystem urgently needs more of to mature beyond services outsourcing.
