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WTDcare Secures Pre-Seed Funding to Transform Saudi Healthtech Landscape

Editorial Team
Editorial Team

2 min

WTDcare, a Saudi healthtech startup, concluded its pre-seed funding round led by Riyadh Angels.

The funding will enhance technology and expand WTDcare’s services across Saudi Arabia.

WTDcare simplifies access to medical transport and home care through an innovative digital platform.

The platform connects users with service providers, enabling real-time booking and tracking.

Attention from investors reflects growing interest in medtech as digital healthcare gains traction.

Saudi healthtech startup WTDcare has wrapped up its pre-seed funding round, with the Riyadh Angels Investors group taking the lead and a handful of angel investors coming onboard. It’s another sign, really, that Saudi Arabia’s digital health sector is shifting into high gear.

The fresh capital will be used to build out WTDcare’s technology stack and scale its reach across the Kingdom. The firm’s main goal? Making medical transport and at-home care easier to access through a seamless digital platform. I reckon anyone who’s had to organise non-emergency transport for a loved one knows it can be a bit of a faff, so tech that smooths out the process is, well, spot on.

Founded by Rakan Al-Harthi, Abdulrahman Al-Madani and Albara Jibreel, WTDcare has carved a niche focusing on non‑emergency medical transport, services for people with special needs, home healthcare, and ambulance coverage for public events. The team relies heavily on a smart application that streamlines bookings while ensuring quality and speed—something you don’t always find in traditional care logistics.

The platform connects individuals and institutions directly with service providers, enabling real-time booking and tracking. It’s a clever melding of tech and empathy, offering a touch of innovation with a sizeable social impact. When chatting with founders at Arageek events, I often sense that drive to merge profit with purpose—WTDcare seems to tick that box nicely.

That said, competition in healthtech isn’t exactly light—so building trust and reliability will be crucial as they expand. But from what I’ve seen across the MENA region, patient‑centred digital care is getting serious traction. And believe it or not, many investors who once fixated on fintech are now giving medtech a curious glance.

In the end, WTDcare looks set to become one of those Saudi startups that mixes practical problem‑solving with technological know-how. The company’s growth, if handled wisely, could easily strengthen the Kingdom’s broader push toward digitised, accessible healthcare. Quite exciting stuff, even if scaling in this sector is, frankly, no walk in the park—definately not.

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