Product Update
Is i Glove Still in Business? (2026 Update)
Is i Glove from Dragons’ Den still around in 2026? The deal it made, the dragons who invested, and where to buy i Glove today.
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iGlove pitched touch screen friendly gloves in series 12 and got an on-air offer from Duncan Bannatyne. The deal did not survive due diligence, but the business did, and today the answer to whether iGlove is still trading is a solid yes.
It is a rare case in this index of a founder building real success entirely outside of the Den's money, and it is worth walking through exactly how that played out.
The Short Answer
iGlove is still in business. The gloves remain available to buy through the company's own website, and the business has been valued at around two million pounds in recent reporting, all built without the Dragon's money it was offered on the show. It is one of the more interesting stories in this index precisely because the Den deal falling through did not sink the company.
The Pitch
Rajan Jerath pitched iGlove in series 12, episode 8, a simple but genuinely useful product: gloves designed to work with touch screens, so people did not have to strip off a glove in the cold just to use their phone. He asked for seventy five thousand pounds for 40 percent of the company.
Duncan Bannatyne made the offer on the terms asked, seventy five thousand pounds for 40 percent, and Jerath accepted on air.
The Deal That Fell Through
As with a good number of on-air handshakes, the Bannatyne investment did not close once the post-show due diligence process ran its course. That leaves iGlove in the same category as several other companies in this index: a real, on-camera deal that the public record shows did not ultimately go through.
What makes iGlove's story stand out is what happened next. Rather than stalling without the investment, the company kept building on its own and reportedly grew into a business worth around two million pounds, entirely independent of any Dragon's money.
Why This One Is a Genuine Independent Success
There is a particular kind of Den story where a founder gets a deal, the money never lands, and the business quietly fades. iGlove is the opposite case. The product itself, cheap, useful, easy to understand, turned out to have enough staying power on its own that Bannatyne's cheque was not the thing standing between the company and survival.
The company has also seen some leadership change over the years, with Rajan Jerath stepping back from the director role and Rajnee Jerath taking it on, while the underlying business has kept operating throughout.
A Product That Only Got More Relevant
There is also a timing element to iGlove's survival worth noting. When it pitched in 2015, touch screens on phones were already the norm, but wearing gloves that could still operate one was more of a genuine annoyance for anyone using a phone outdoors in winter. That underlying problem has not gone away in the years since, smartphones remain the primary way most people navigate, pay and communicate, so the basic case for touch screen gloves has, if anything, held steady rather than faded the way some novelty gadgets do once the initial buzz wears off.
That durability of the underlying need, more than any single marketing push, is probably the simplest explanation for why a company that lost its Dragon's investment still managed to grow into a business worth roughly two million pounds regardless.
It also helps that the product itself is cheap to manufacture and easy to sell through many different channels at once, direct online, through third party marketplaces, and through gift and travel retail outlets, rather than depending on a single storefront or a single big retail partner staying loyal to the brand.
Where Things Stand Now
iGlove today sells a range of products from basic touch screen gloves at under six pounds up to premium leather and Bluetooth-enabled versions. The core proposition from the original pitch, cheap, functional, touch screen friendly gloves, is still exactly what the company sells.
If you are wondering whether iGlove made it, the answer is yes, and it made it without the Dragon's investment it was offered on the show, which is a genuinely uncommon outcome in this index.
Of everything in this batch of pitches, iGlove is probably the clearest reminder that a Dragons' Den handshake, however good it looks on camera, is not what makes or breaks a business. A cheap, well designed product that solves a real everyday annoyance can build a two million pound business with or without a Dragon's cheque behind it.

Where to buy i Glove
Still selling as of 4 May 2026. Check today's price and availability.
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See the full i Glove deal breakdown and term sheet →
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