Aumet has secured $12 million in Series A funding to expand its AI-powered healthcare procurement platform across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).
The investment was announced by AAIC Investment, which backs Aumet through its Africa Innovation & Healthcare Fund II.
The new funding will help Aumet strengthen its technology platform and grow its operations as demand rises for more efficient healthcare supply chains across the region.
Founded as a health-tech company, Aumet develops digital tools that simplify how pharmacies, hospitals, and medical suppliers buy and manage healthcare products. Its platform uses artificial intelligence to support procurement, inventory management, and healthcare data analysis.
The company said its system helps reduce delays, improve transparency, and make healthcare supply chains more efficient.
Aumet’s platform is already being widely used across the region. According to the company, more than 12,000 pharmacies currently use the system, while over 1,000 pharmaceutical suppliers are connected to the platform.
The business operates in Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, supporting more than five million transactions every year. Aumet also reported cumulative gross merchandise volume exceeding $1 billion.
The company is now moving beyond its original marketplace model and positioning itself as a full healthcare procurement operating system powered by artificial intelligence.
To support different healthcare users, Aumet has introduced several specialised products.
Its “Pulse” platform is designed for individual pharmacies and provides cloud-based inventory management and procurement support.
“Chain” is aimed at pharmacy groups and includes centralised purchasing tools and AI-powered analytics.
The company’s “Enterprise” solution focuses on hospitals and government healthcare agencies, offering large-scale procurement management and advanced data systems.
Aumet’s Enterprise platform has already been introduced within Jordan’s public healthcare system. The rollout started at Al Bashir Hospital, one of the country’s largest public hospitals.
The system has since expanded across 32 hospitals, more than 500 medical centres, and over 18 medical warehouses.
The deployment highlights the company’s efforts to build large-scale digital healthcare infrastructure capable of supporting national healthcare systems.
As healthcare providers across MENA continue investing in digital transformation, companies like Aumet are attracting growing investor interest for technologies that improve efficiency, transparency, and access within healthcare supply chains.