
Saudi startup WTDcare secures pre-seed funding led by Riyadh Angels Investors to expand its healthtech platform for non-emergency medical transport and at-home care.
The startup has closed its pre-seed funding round, led by Riyadh Angels Investors with participation from several individual backers, a strong signal that Saudi Arabia’s digital health sector is entering a new phase of growth.
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The fresh capital will help build its technology stack and expand its reach across the Kingdom. The company’s mission is simple yet ambitious: to make medical transport and at-home care more accessible through an intuitive digital platform.
Anyone who’s ever tried to arrange non-emergency medical transport knows it can be a real hassle, so a tech-driven platform that streamlines the process feels like a timely solution.
Founded by Rakan Al-Harthi, Abdulrahman Al-Madani, and Albara Jibreel, WTDcare focuses on non-emergency medical transport, services for people with special needs, home healthcare, and ambulance support for public events. Its platform connects individuals and institutions directly with verified service providers, enabling real-time booking, tracking, and coordination.
By combining smart logistics with compassionate care, WTDcare is bringing much-needed innovation to a sector often bogged down by inefficiencies.
Still, the healthtech race is heating up across the MENA region. To stand out, WTDcare will need to double down on trust, reliability, and quality assurance, key pillars in patient-centered care. Interestingly, many investors who once focused on fintech are now pivoting toward healthtech, drawn by the sector’s social impact and long-term scalability.
If WTDcare executes its vision effectively, it could play a central role in Saudi Arabia’s push for digitized, accessible healthcare, a move aligned with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 goals. It’s an exciting milestone, and while scaling in healthcare is rarely easy, its approach shows both practical problem-solving and technological promise.
WTDcare’s funding success highlights a broader shift toward digital healthcare innovation across the MENA region. As regional investors pour more capital into healthtech, startups like WTDcare are proving that technology and empathy can coexist, creating scalable solutions that address real community needs.