Zeya Health, a Singapore-based healthcare technology company building artificial intelligence (AI)-native infrastructure for healthcare providers, has raised $575,000 in pre-seed funding from Antler and a group of strategic angel investors.

The firm said in a statement on Monday that the funding will support continued product development and scaled deployments across private healthcare providers in Singapore and the broader Asia-Pacific region.

The company is actively hiring Forward Deployed Engineers and Clinical Deployment Specialists to help with scaling the product and commercial scale-up.

Zeya Health currently works with healthcare providers across physiotherapy, primary care, paediatrics, surgical and aesthetic outpatient services, with expansion underway into additional care models and regional markets in 2026.

As providers increasingly compete on operational excellence and patient experience, Zeya aims to become the foundational AI layer that enables healthcare organizations to scale sustainably, without adding complexity.

The round follows rapid, demand-led adoption and supports accelerated deployments as providers across Asia-Pacific confront rising patient volumes without matching administrative capacity.

It is noted that the region’s healthcare market is projected to reach approximately $5 trillion by 2030, yet it is simultaneously facing a severe shortage of healthcare professionals.

Healthcare providers across the region are facing a structural inflection point: rising patient volumes, increasing operational complexity, and growing expectations in clinical or administrative capacity. Zeya Health said the firm was built to address this gap.

“We’ve both seen firsthand how care teams end up spending more time fighting systems than caring for patients. Whether it was deploying digital health systems at scale or watching clinics struggle with growing patient loads, the same issue kept coming up: operational friction limits how much care can actually be delivered,

“We started Zeya to remove that bottleneck, so providers can grow without burning out their teams,” said Agastya Samat, the firm’s Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer.

Samat, spent over a decade in startups, most recently deploying large-scale digital health solutions with the NHS in the UK and a major insurer in the Middle East.

His Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Pasindu Wijesena, founded his first AI startup five years before the launch of ChatGPT and has led engineering teams of over 100
in fast-paced product environments.

Zeya is an AI front desk that plugs into clinics’ existing EMR and communication channels like WhatsApp.

It automates the admin that buries the medical team today: reminders, follow-ups, reschedules, and patient engagement, all running 24/7 without replacing their core EMR infrastructure.

Their partners can go live in under 48 hours after the product scans their existing workflows, implementing AI-native without requiring new logins, formats, or manual rule-setting.

Since August, Zeya Health has recorded over 20x growth in clinic establishment, sustaining 2 times month-on-month expansion.

As demand accelerates, Zeya Health said it is working with larger healthcare groups to standardize their workflows, reduce manual workload, and enhance patient engagement at scale.

AcuMed, a healthcare provider in Singapore, is currently assessing and working towards piloting these solutions with Zeya in a multi-clinic environment.

“From day zero, the Zeya team has executed with speed and discipline. They are addressing a deeply entrenched problem in healthcare: operational and administrative overhead while earning trust from providers who are cautious about adopting new systems,

“Their early traction reflects both the urgency of the problem and the founders’ grit in turning insight into real-world adoption,” said Winnie Khoo, Partner at Antler.

Antler backed Zeya Health with its first institutional check after the residency, and subsequently doubled down as the company demonstrated strong execution and demand-led traction.

Singapore’s healthtech startup Mito Health raises $2.2M in seed round