HomeSingaporeSingapore-Based Zeya Health Raises $575K Pre-Seed Round Led by Antler

Singapore-Based Zeya Health Raises $575K Pre-Seed Round Led by Antler

Singapore-Based Zeya Health Raises $575K Pre-Seed Round Led by Antler

Zeya Health is a health technology startup based in Singapore. It builds smart AI tools that help clinics and hospitals manage their daily work more easily. Its goal is to reduce the heavy workload of healthcare staff by using automation.

Zeya Health has raised $575,000 in pre-seed funding. The investment was led by Antler, along with support from some strategic angel investors. This funding will help the company improve its product and grow faster.

Across the Asia-Pacific region, hospitals and clinics are seeing more patients, but there are not enough doctors and healthcare workers. Because of this, staff are under pressure and spend too much time on paperwork and scheduling. Zeya’s platform is becoming popular because it helps clinics automate these tasks without changing their existing systems.

Zeya works like an AI-powered front desk assistant. It connects with clinic record systems and communication tools like WhatsApp. It can automatically send appointment reminders, handle rescheduling, follow up with patients and manage basic communication. Clinics can start using it within 48 hours, making setup quick and simple.

Since August, Zeya has grown very quickly. The number of clinics using its platform has increased more than 20 times, with about 2 times growth every month. Now, larger healthcare groups are also showing interest. One such provider, AcuMed in Singapore, is testing Zeya across several of its clinics.

In a statement, Antler partner Winnie Khoo said the firm backed Zeya
early due to the founders’ execution speed and focus on addressing
operational inefficiencies that have long constrained healthcare
providers. Antler first invested following its residency programme and
later increased its exposure as the company demonstrated demand-led
traction.

“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,” Khoo said.

Zeya was started by Agastya Samat and Pasindu Wijesena. Before launching Zeya, they worked on large digital health and AI projects in Europe and the Middle East. They have strong experience in using technology to improve healthcare systems.

While working in healthcare, the founders noticed that doctors and nurses were spending too much time on paperwork, scheduling, and other administrative work. This reduced the time they could spend taking care of patients. To solve this problem, they created Zeya to help automate these tasks and improve patient care.

“We’ve both seen firsthand how care teams end up spending more time fighting systems than caring for patients,” Samat said. “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.”

Zeya will use the new funding to improve its product and to start working with more private hospitals and clinics in Singapore and other Asia-Pacific countries. This will help the company grow faster and serve more healthcare providers.

To support its growth, Zeya is hiring engineers and clinical deployment specialists. These new team members will help build better technology and make sure clinics can easily use Zeya’s platform.

Currently, Zeya works with clinics that provide physiotherapy, general care, children’s care, surgery, and aesthetic treatments. The company plans to expand into more types of healthcare services and new regions within this year. Zeya wants to become the main AI support system that helps healthcare organisations grow smoothly without making their work more complicated.

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