Saudi private equity is searching for the next big area after early waves of focus on fintech, education, and ecommerce. Health is now moving up the list. Dhiraj Joshi, a partner at Arthur D Little in the Middle East, said health is an up-and-coming area for Saudi venture capital, and that health tech is where “you’ll see a lot of activity in the next two or three years.” That timeline points directly to Saudi healthtech M&A 2026 as a realistic deal theme.
Demand is one clear driver. S&P predicted Saudi Arabia will need another 30,000 public and private hospital beds between 2023 and 2030. That kind of need can push investors to back operators, expand capacity, and bring in tools that improve how hospitals run. For private equity, healthtech is attractive because it can scale inside hospital groups and across networks.
Capital is already moving. Aranca said that between 2020 and 2024, Saudi-based entities invested over $6.47 billion in domestic healthcare ventures. AGBI also reported that Jada Fund of Funds, wholly owned by the Saudi Public Investment Fund, led a $250 million fundraising round to invest in major healthcare companies. These signals matter for M&A because strong funding and active financial sponsors can accelerate deal-making and build platforms that later acquire smaller healthtech tools.
Digital Systems, Regulation, and Partnerships Are Lowering Friction
Digital infrastructure is getting stronger, which can make tech rollouts easier after an acquisition. Med-Tech World reported that the National Platform for Health and Insurance Exchange Services (NPHIES) electronic health record management system has been implemented. It also said the number of hospitals equipped with Hospital Information Systems has risen substantially, and electronic referrals are widely used across all Ministry of Health facilities. It also highlighted the SEHA Virtual Hospital, which uses telemedicine for remote consultations and specialized services.
Rules and institutions also shape investor confidence. Lexology stated that foreign investors are allowed to repatriate profits and 100% ownership of healthcare companies under the New Investment Law, including hospitals, clinics, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and biotech ventures. It also said the Private Sector Participation Law allows private entities to operate healthcare facilities under contracts that typically last 20–30 years. Separately, Med-Tech World said the Saudi Food and Drug Authority reached maturity level four (ML4) for regulating medicines and vaccines under the World Health Organization’s Global Benchmarking Tool.
Real commercial ties show how healthtech can enter through enterprise deals and then expand. Med-Tech World reported that Beamtree signed a $2 million contract with Dr. Sulaiman Al Habib Medical Group to deliver AI technology aimed at improving clinical coding. Arab News also pointed to partnerships that bring advanced AI technologies and knowledge exchange into the system, including a partnership between the National Unified Procurement Co. and Grupo Elfa. For private equity, these examples map a path: buy, build, integrate, and scale digital tools across providers.
Why is Saudi private equity turning to healthtech now?
What demand signals support Saudi healthtech M&A 2026?
What investment signals show momentum in healthcare deals?
How do regulation and policy affect healthtech investment in Saudi Arabia?
What are examples of healthtech activity already happening in Saudi Arabia?