Daniel Dines (born c. 1972) is a Romanian software engineer and entrepreneur best known as the co-founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of UiPath, a leading provider of robotic process automation (RPA) software that automates repetitive business tasks using artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies.[1][2] Born in Bucharest, Romania, Dines grew up during the communist era and faced personal challenges, including his parents' divorce at age 19, which motivated him to pursue a career in technology to create meaningful impact.[3] He earned a Bachelor of Science and Master of Science in computer science from the University of Bucharest before joining Microsoft in Seattle in 2001, where he worked as a software developer until returning to Romania in 2005.[1]In 2005, Dines founded DeskOver, a small software outsourcing firm based in his Bucharest apartment, initially focusing on custom development services for clients.[3][2] The company pivoted multiple times, including failed attempts at consumer products, before shifting to RPA in 2012 after a client requested a demonstration of automated processes, leading to the rebranding as UiPath and the productization of its automation tools.[3][2] Under Dines' leadership, UiPath bootstrapped for a decade, reaching $500,000 in annual recurring revenue by 2013, before accelerating growth to $5 million in 2016, $35 million in 2017, and nearly $200 million in 2018, making it one of the fastest-growing software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies at the time.[3][2]UiPath relocated its headquarters to New York City in 2018 and went public on the New York Stock Exchange in April 2021, raising $1.3 billion in its initial public offering and achieving a market capitalization exceeding $30 billion, establishing it as a "decacorn" valued at over $10 billion.[1][3] The company now serves over 10,800 customers across 100 countries, including major enterprises like Sumitomo Mitsui Bank and Toyota North America, with fiscal year revenue reaching $1.4 billion for fiscal year 2025 (ended January 31, 2025), though it reported a $74 million net loss amid investments in generative AI integrations such as UiPath Autopilot and AI Center.[1][2] Dines briefly stepped down as CEO in January 2024 to become chief innovation officer but returned to the CEO role in May 2024 to guide the firm's evolution in the AI era, emphasizing reliable automation models.[2] Beyond UiPath, he co-founded Crew Capital, a venture firm where he serves as a general partner.[1]
Early life and education
Childhood in Romania
Daniel Dines, born Daniel Solomon Dines in January 1972 in Onești, Romania, grew up in a modest family environment shaped by his parents' professions. His father was a civil engineer, and his mother was a teacher; the couple had met after being relocated by the communist government to the industrial town of Onești, which was developed around a new chemical factory under Nicolae Ceaușescu's regime.[4][5] Dines was primarily raised by his grandparents in a small village setting, where he enjoyed a happy childhood filled with outdoor activities such as playing football, tennis, and swimming.[6][5]His early interests leaned toward the humanities; an avid reader, Dines aspired to become a writer and even attempted to pen a Kafka-esque novel at age 17. However, he excelled in mathematics, which led him to attend a school focused on math and computer science, though he found the rote learning style uninspiring and briefly disengaged from it.[4][6] Despite the scarcity of personal computers in Romania during this period, Dines developed an initial theoretical understanding of programming through self-study, borrowing books from libraries to learn concepts without regular access to hardware.[5][4]Dines' formative years unfolded under the constraints of communist Romania in the 1970s and 1980s, a time of economic uniformity and limited resources that fostered resourcefulness among its citizens. Life behind the Iron Curtain was simple, with everyday shortages that Dines later described as unremarkable in childhood due to their ubiquity, though his family faced financial hardships after the 1989 revolution.[6][4] The post-communist transition brought hyperinflation and systemic collapse, compelling Dines from age 19 to support himself through odd jobs, including currency arbitrage, while living on as little as $1 a day in the early 1990s.[4][6] This environment of scarcity and opportunism honed his self-reliance, influencing his later pivot to practical programming skills using a friend's computer at night.[4] In 1990, following the fall of Ceaușescu, he moved to Bucharest to begin university studies.[4]
University studies
Daniel Dines attended the University of Bucharest starting in 1990, shortly after the fall of the communist regime in Romania, where he pursued studies in mathematics and computer science.[4][5] He earned a Bachelor of Science degree around 1994 and later a Master of Science in the same field by 1997.[1][7][8]During his university years, Dines focused primarily on coursework related to mathematics and computer science, attending lectures selectively as he found many classes uninspiring due to outdated teaching methods inherited from the communist era.[5] He largely skipped non-relevant sessions but engaged enough to pass exams and complete his degrees, supplementing his formal education with self-directed learning in programming.[9][6] This period marked the emergence of his interest in software development, as he began teaching himself C++ using borrowed books and access to a friend's computer, laying groundwork for automation concepts that would later influence his career.[4]While specific academic projects are not widely documented, Dines has noted the lack of practical, innovative instruction from professors, which prompted his independent exploration of coding rather than reliance on faculty guidance.[5] His studies at the University of Bucharest provided a foundational understanding of algorithms and computational principles essential for software engineering, though much of his technical proficiency developed through extracurricular self-study.[10]
Professional career
Microsoft tenure
Following his studies at the University of Bucharest, where he earned a degree in computer science, Daniel Dines joined Microsoft in Seattle in 2001 as a software development engineer.[4][11] He worked on the company's software development teams, focusing on enterprise software solutions, including designing and developing the SQL Server Agent, a key component for automating database maintenance and job scheduling tasks.[12] During his tenure, which lasted until 2005, Dines contributed to coding and project work that honed his skills in large-scale software engineering within a fast-paced, innovative environment.[3][13]Dines' time abroad exposed him to the global tech ecosystem, where he gained firsthand experience with cutting-edge development practices and collaborative team dynamics at one of the world's leading technology firms.[14] However, adapting to life in the United States proved challenging for the young Romanian immigrant, involving cultural adjustments and personal struggles that contrasted sharply with his upbringing.[14][15] This period nonetheless broadened his perspective on technological innovation and reinforced his technical expertise in building robust, scalable systems.In 2005, after nearly five years at Microsoft, Dines decided to return to Romania, driven by entrepreneurial ambitions to start his own venture and a longing to reconnect with his homeland.[3][4] The move allowed him to apply the skills and insights gained in Seattle to opportunities closer to his roots, setting the stage for his future endeavors in technology.[16]
Founding and leading UiPath
Daniel Dines co-founded DeskOver in 2005 in Bucharest, Romania, alongside Marius Tîrcă, initially as a small software outsourcing firm operating from an apartment with a handful of engineers.[1][17][18] The company focused on custom software development for clients, drawing on Dines' prior experience in software engineering to build early projects that addressed repetitive administrative tasks.[4]By 2013, DeskOver pivoted toward robotic process automation (RPA), releasing UiPath Studio as its first dedicated product to automate mundane, rule-based processes using software bots that mimic human interactions with digital systems.[19] This shift stemmed from Dines' vision to reduce the time and stress associated with menial tasks, evolving the firm from outsourcing services to a technology platform that enabled non-technical users to design automation workflows. The company continued as DeskOver until rebranding to UiPath in 2015, emphasizing its RPA core, and began gaining traction in Europe before expanding globally.[1]Under Dines' leadership as co-founder and CEO, UiPath achieved key milestones, including relocating its headquarters to New York City in 2018 to proximity to major international customers and investors.[1][20] The company went public on the New York Stock Exchange in April 2021 under the ticker PATH, raising $1.34 billion in one of the largest software IPOs at the time, with a debut market valuation of approximately $35 billion.[21] By 2025, UiPath had grown into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise, reporting strong quarterly revenue growth and advancing its platform with agentic AI capabilities to enhance automation scalability. In 2025, under Dines' leadership, UiPath launched the UiPath Platform for agentic automation and orchestration, which was recognized as one of TIME's Best Inventions of 2025. At the FUSION 2025 event, Dines emphasized integrating agentic AI to achieve ROI in enterprise automation.[18][22][23][24]Dines served as sole CEO from the company's inception until April 2022, when Rob Enslin joined as co-CEO. In July 2023, Dines announced his transition from co-CEO to Chief Innovation Officer effective January 2024 to focus on product vision; he was re-appointed as sole CEO and executive chairman effective June 2024 to steer strategic priorities, including deeper AI integration into RPA tools.[25][26][27][28] These decisions positioned UiPath to evolve from traditional RPA toward end-to-end automation platforms that incorporate generative AI for more intelligent process orchestration.[29][2]UiPath emerged as the leading provider in the RPA market under Dines' guidance, powering automation for thousands of enterprises worldwide and earning him the moniker "Boss of the Bots" from Forbes, along with recognition as the world's first "bot billionaire" due to his stake in the company.[30][4][2]
Personal life and philanthropy
Family and residence
Daniel Dines is married, with one child.[1]Dines resides in New York, New York, reflecting the headquarters location of UiPath, while maintaining strong international ties to his native Romania.[1]In his personal life, Dines is an avid reader and enjoys playing competitive bridge, activities that trace back to his university days.[4][1]As of November 2025, Dines' net worth is estimated at US$1.6 billion, primarily derived from his equity stake in UiPath.[1]
Charitable contributions
In April 2019, Daniel Dines announced that UiPath, the company he founded, would donate €1 million to support the reconstruction of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris following the devastating fire.[31][32]Dines is a member of Founders Pledge, an organization that encourages entrepreneurs to commit at least 1% of their wealth to effective altruism causes, such as global health and poverty alleviation, upon a liquidity event.[33]Through the UiPath Foundation, established in 2019 at Dines' initiative, he has supported educational initiatives in Romania and India, providing underprivileged children with access to digital skills training and co-designed learning programs that have impacted over 80,000 individuals from vulnerable communities.[34][35]Dines has also advocated for ethical AI development and the societal benefits of automation via philanthropic engagements, including participation in international forums like the AI Going Global event on education in an AI-driven economy, emphasizing responsible technology deployment to address job displacement and enhance human potential