Oman based HealPort raises $1.2 million to expand its smart healthcare infrastructure platform, focusing on data driven decision systems and global health ecosystem integration.
Oman based HealPort has raised $1.2 million in funding as it looks to expand its smart infrastructure layer for healthcare systems, joining a small but growing group of startups in the Gulf focused on digital health architecture rather than direct service delivery. The funding was disclosed in April 2026 and marks the company’s first recorded round.
The Muscat headquartered company is led by founder and chief executive Hussein Estahri, who is also described as the platform’s chief architect. Public disclosures around additional co founders remain limited, with available filings and company material primarily identifying Estahri as the central founding figure.
HealPort is building infrastructure designed to help governments, healthcare institutions and agencies move from fragmented operational inputs toward structured decision making systems. Its platform integrates multiple data layers including policy signals, operational constraints and market variables, aiming to produce what it describes as decision grade outputs for planning and coordination across healthcare systems.
The company said the new funding will be allocated across three areas including infrastructure development and integration, expansion of its global ecosystem and positioning its platform as a standardized layer for digital healthcare intelligence. This includes interoperability across systems and deployment readiness for institutional clients.
The raise comes as healthcare systems globally continue to invest in digital transformation, particularly around data infrastructure and interoperability. Research across the Internet of Medical Things highlights how connected healthcare systems are increasingly dependent on integrated data flows to enable real time monitoring, diagnostics and planning, though challenges around security and standardization remain central.
Across the region, funding activity remains relatively concentrated but selective. Data tracking startup investment in Oman shows fewer deals compared to previous periods, though overall capital deployed remains significant due to larger ticket sizes in select sectors. Within this environment, healthtech infrastructure plays into broader national priorities around system efficiency and digital transformation.
Globally, companies building similar layers of healthcare infrastructure and intelligence have attracted sustained investment, particularly those enabling interoperability and analytics across hospital networks and public health systems. These platforms are increasingly positioned as foundational technology rather than standalone applications, reflecting a shift in how healthcare digitization is being approached.
HealPort’s platform, while also linked to medical coordination and cross border care services, is now being positioned more broadly as an infrastructure layer that supports planning and system level decision making. The company said the latest funding will accelerate deployment and partnerships as it expands beyond its initial markets into a wider global healthcare ecosystem.