Q4 2025 · Europe
2 e-commerce infrastructure startups based in Europe ranked by GitHub engineering acceleration. Filtered from our broader E-commerce Infrastructure sector rankings.
| # | Company | Stage | Geo | Commits (14d) | Change | Contributors | Contrib. Growth | New Repos | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | vanilophp Truly Laravel E-commerce Framework View signal profile → | Seed | EU | 9 | +999% | 12 | +67% | 0 | Engineering hiring burst |
| 2 | AdyenView signal profile → | Seed | EU | 32 | -24% | 13 | +13% | 0 | Framework migration |
Sorted by commit velocity change (14-day window, descending). Data last updated Q4 2025. Geography from GitHub org profiles.
The free Acceleration Watch: five venture-backed teams accelerating on the engineering signal, translated into plain English — 21 to 47 days before the deck circulates. No code-reading, no card.
In Q4 2025, vanilophp leads e-commerce infrastructure startups in Europe with 9 commits over a 14-day window (+999% change) and 12 active contributors. Across all 2 tracked Europe-based startups in this sector, the average 14-day commit velocity is 21 commits. The dominant signal pattern is "Engineering hiring burst", which typically indicates rapid team expansion ahead of a product launch or fundraise.
Europe accounts for 2 of the e-commerce infrastructure startups in our tracking dataset for Q4 2025. This geographic view filters the broader sector rankings to help investors focused on Europe-based deal flow identify engineering acceleration patterns within their target geography. Regional concentrations often reflect local regulatory environments, talent pools, and investor networks that shape startup trajectories differently from global averages.
We derive startup geography primarily from the GitHub organization profile location field, supplemented by a manually curated enrichment database of known startup headquarters. This means startups without a public GitHub location may appear in our global sector rankings but not in geographic filters. The geographic classification uses broad regions (Europe, etc.) rather than city-level granularity to provide meaningful sample sizes for comparison.