US private equity fundraising has entered a more disciplined phase. According to PitchBook’s latest update, the post-pandemic boom has given way to a structural reset marked by capital concentration, not merely temporary market headwinds. While overall volumes have cooled from their 2021 peaks, the real story lies in where the money is flowing—and where it is not. PitchBook also pointed out that limited partners (LPs) are now far more selective.
The research report from PitchBook added that since being constrained by lower distributions, liquidity pressures, and internal governance limits, they are doubling down on established relationships rather than forging new ones.
Experienced managers raising their fourth fund or later captured 88 percent of capital in 2024–2025, well above the decade-long average.
As a result, the top 10 funds closed through mid-April 2026 accounted for $60.2 billion, or 61.1 percent of total capital raised—a level that now appears to be the new baseline.
This concentration has created a clear barbell effect.
Megafunds (those larger than $5 billion) continue to dominate, benefiting from brand recognition, operational scale, and the ability to offer LPs a one-stop platform across private equity, credit, and real assets.
Even with near-term internal rates of return hovering around 7 percent—well below long-term medians—LPs value the lower volatility and tighter return dispersion these vehicles provide.
Megafunds also deliver co-investment opportunities and simpler portfolio management, making them the default choice for many institutions. At the other end of the spectrum, specialist managers are thriving.
In 2025 they raised 73.9 percent of all capital, up sharply from the five-year average of 64.1 percent. Deep sector expertise and proven operational value creation have become non-negotiable for success.
Generalist strategies, by contrast, have lost ground as LPs seek differentiated returns rather than broad exposure.
The middle market is feeling the squeeze. For the first time since 2018, the number of middle-market funds reaching final close fell below 200 in 2025.
Capital raised in this segment dropped to $147.8 billion last year from $222 billion in 2024, with only 176 funds closing through early 2026.
Megafunds are increasingly competing in this space, while specialists siphon away capital with niche strategies.
Undifferentiated managers are struggling to stand out in an environment where LPs prefer fewer, higher-conviction relationships.
Another notable shift is the growing role of perpetual and semi-liquid structures.
Evergreen private equity assets under management reached $83.4 billion by the end of 2025, having doubled since 2022. These vehicles are drawing retail capital and enabling faster deployment, though they may compress returns by intensifying deal competition.
PitchBook analysts conclude that the industry’s long-term growth remains intact, but the path forward is narrower.
PitchBook concluded that success now hinges on clear differentiation—whether through massive scale or specialized expertise—rather than riding a rising tide. For general partners, the takeaway is clear now. They have to basically adapt now to the new reality of selective capital or risk being left behind.