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Regent buys TechCrunch from Yahoo

Another owner for TechCrunch: Regent buys it from Yahoo in 2025.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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- Editor-in-Chief
Mar 22, 2025, 4:39 AM EDT
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An image of the TechCrunch website displayed in a web browser. The screen shows the TechCrunch homepage with its distinctive green "TC" logo at the top. The navigation menu includes options like HOME, STARTUPS, MOBILE, and GADGETS. The main content features an article about "A Perfect Circle: Friends" with an orange circular logo, and below that is a headline reading "Twitter Founders Put Their Weight Behind A New Startup: Lift" by Robin Wauters. The sidebar shows Y Combinator news and other tech stories including Facebook-related content.
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Yahoo is offloading TechCrunch, the scrappy little tech news site that’s been a staple for startup junkies and gadget geeks since the mid-2000s. The buyer? Regent, a private equity firm that’s been on a bit of a shopping spree lately. The price tag? Well, they’re keeping that under wraps for now, but the deal’s done, according to an announcement that hit the wires on March 21, 2025.

If this feels like déjà vu, you’re not wrong. TechCrunch has been passed around more times than a hot potato at a family reunion. Let’s rewind the tape a bit. Founded in 2005 by Michael Arrington, TechCrunch started as a gritty, no-filter blog that punched above its weight, breaking stories on startups and Silicon Valley drama. It was the kind of place where you’d find out about a hot new app before your cousin’s “next big idea” pitch at Thanksgiving. Then, in 2010, AOL swooped in and bought it for a reported $25 million (some say it could’ve been as high as $40 million, but who’s counting?). That was the first big ownership shakeup, and it wouldn’t be the last.

Fast forward to 2015, and Verizon entered the chat, scooping up AOL for $4.4 billion. Two years later, they grabbed Yahoo for $4.48 billion, mashing everything together into a media stew they ambitiously called Oath. (Yeah, that name didn’t stick—by 2019, it was rebranded as Verizon Media.) TechCrunch, along with Engadget, Yahoo Sports, and a handful of others, got swept into this corporate blender. But the media mashup didn’t exactly turn into the digital goldmine Verizon hoped for. By 2021, they were ready to cut their losses, selling the whole Verizon Media kit and caboodle—including TechCrunch—to Apollo Global Management for $5 billion. Apollo slapped the Yahoo! name back on it, and life went on. Until now.

So, why’s Yahoo ditching TechCrunch this time? According to Connie Loizos, TechCrunch’s editor-in-chief, it’s a matter of fit—or lack thereof. “Yahoo decided to sell TechCrunch because, in the end, our DNA is simply different from the rest of its portfolio,” she wrote in Friday’s announcement. Translation: TechCrunch is the quirky cousin who doesn’t quite vibe with Yahoo’s more buttoned-up crew—think Yahoo Mail, Yahoo Finance, and Yahoo News. Still, Yahoo’s not cutting ties completely; they’re holding onto a “small interest” in TechCrunch, whatever that means. A little skin in the game, maybe, just in case the site’s next chapter turns into a blockbuster.

Regent, the new owner, isn’t exactly a household name, but they’re making moves in the media space. Just a day before the TechCrunch deal, they picked up Foundry, the outfit behind tech pubs like PCWorld, Macworld, and TechAdvisor. (If you’re sensing a pattern here, you’re not alone—Regent seems to have a thing for scooping up legacy tech media brands.) Based in Beverly Hills, Regent’s a private equity player known for buying up companies, tweaking them, and—well, we’ll see what happens next. Their portfolio’s a mixed bag, spanning everything from home goods to military contractors, so TechCrunch is joining an eclectic crew.

For TechCrunch readers and staff, this sale raises the usual questions: What’s next? Will Regent keep the site’s startup-obsessed, scoop-chasing spirit alive, or will they try to polish it into something shinier—and maybe a little less raw? Loizos seems optimistic, hinting that the team’s ready to “double down” on what makes TechCrunch tick. But private equity takeovers can be a wild card—sometimes they pump in cash and ambition, sometimes they strip things down to the studs.

Meanwhile, Yahoo’s still got a decent chunk of its media empire intact. Engadget’s hanging on, though it’s had its own rough patches—last year, it slashed jobs across its leadership team, per reports from The Verge. Yahoo Sports, Yahoo Finance, and Yahoo News are still in the fold too, chugging along as the core of what Yahoo’s become post-Verizon. But shedding TechCrunch feels like a signal: Yahoo’s tightening its focus, zeroing in on the stuff that fits its vibe—mass-market, everyday-user fare over niche tech chatter.

TechCrunch’s journey mirrors the broader ups and downs of digital media. Back in its early days, it rode the wave of the blog boom, when a small team with a WordPress site could shake up an industry. The AOL buyout brought scale, the Verizon era brought chaos, and Apollo’s stint brought—well, a breather, maybe. Now, with Regent at the helm, it’s anyone’s guess where the site lands next. Will it stay the go-to for gritty startup scoops, or will it morph into something sleeker, chasing clicks over cred?


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