Top 10 MedTech Startups in India 2025

India’s medtech sector is booming, and it’s no accident. In 2025, the country’s fast becoming one of the most promising markets for medical technology, fuelled by a mix of tech innovation, rising healthcare demand and strong public-private partnerships. From AI-powered diagnostic tools to affordable wearable health monitors, Indian medtech companies are carving out global recognition by combining ingenuity with accessibility.

What makes India so well-positioned in this space is its ability to scale, and this is true in a plethora of different tech-related industries especially. A huge, digitally connected population, a growing middle class and the government’s focus on digital health initiatives have all played a part in accelerating the rise of homegrown solutions.

As investment pours in and startups mature, we’re seeing world-class innovation rooted in real-world challenges – from rural healthcare gaps to overburdened urban hospitals.

 

The 10 Top MedTech Startups in India in 2025

 

A decade ago, India’s medtech landscape was fragmented and heavily reliant on imports, as were many other industries. Most hospitals depended on foreign-made equipment, and domestic innovation was limited to small-scale players. Fast-forward to today, and the scene has completely transformed in ways we could probably never have imagined ten years ago. India has gone from being a passive consumer to an active producer of high-quality medical technology.

Much of that change began with a policy shift – “Make in India” encouraged homegrown manufacturing, while the launch of Ayushman Bharat gave a huge push to digitised, accessible healthcare. At the same time, a wave of health-focused startups emerged, blending software, hardware and AI to tackle everything from chronic disease monitoring to rural diagnostics.

The rise of healthtech incubators, increased VC interest and improved regulatory frameworks also gave entrepreneurs the space to build products tailored for India’s unique healthcare landscape. Innovations now focus as much on affordability and scale as they do on technical excellence.

As digital health platforms integrate with wearables, telemedicine apps and AI-led tools, India’s medtech sector is no longer playing catch-up, it’s setting the pace for inclusive, tech-driven healthcare solutions at home and abroad.

 

CureFit

 

Founded in 2016 in Bengaluru by Mukesh Bansal and Ankit Nagori, CureFit (now popularly known as Cult.fit) pioneered the blended model of digital-and-physical wellness under its verticals: Cult.fit (fitness studios), Mind.fit (meditation), Eat.fit (nutritious meals) and Care.fit (primary healthcare).

Backed by leading VCs including Accel and Tata Digital, it has scaled rapidly with hundreds of centres across India and a richly interactive consumer app.

What sets it apart from competitors is its holistic ecosystem. Users can stream workouts, consult doctors, book lab tests and order meals, all unified on one platform. Its emphasis on preventive healthcare, behavioural fitness and affordability has made it relevant for India’s growing wellness-conscious middle class. It’s earned unicorn status and remains top-of-mind among integrated health-tech innovators.

 

Practo

 

Launched in 2008 in Bengaluru by Shashank ND, Abhinav Lal and Siddhartha Nihalani, Practo is one of India’s earliest and most enduring digital-health platforms. It connects patients with over 100,000 clinicians, offering doctor-booking, teleconsultations, diagnostics and medicine delivery, with its Ray software powering thousands of clinics.

Profitable since early 2024 and generating international revenue via its hospital management services in the Middle East, Africa and Southeast Asia, Practo is now expanding into developed markets including Canada and Australia. Its success lies in building a robust SaaS backbone that serves both providers and patients, creating stickiness on both sides and becoming the trusted go‑to for full-stack healthcare access.

 

Dozee

 

Dozee, founded in October 2015 by IIT graduates Mudit Dandwate and Gaurav Parchani, has redefined remote patient monitoring in India with its contactless AI-based sensor that slips under a mattress. It continuously captures vitals – including heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure – with clinical accuracy and delivers alert systems to hospitals, nursing facilities and homes.

Used and trusted by over 300 hospitals and monitoring more than 16,000 beds across four countries, Dozee has saved thousands of nursing hours and issued critical alerts to prevent adverse events. Its “Made in India for the world” model, early clinical validation and global reach position it ahead of peers in critical-care monitoring innovation.

 

Qure.ai

 

Founded in 2016 in Mumbai by Prashant Warier and team, Qure.ai is a cutting-edge AI specialist in medical imaging analysis. Its flagship qXR product rapidly screens chest X‑rays for tuberculosis, lung cancer, heart failure and over 35 conditions using deep learning trained on millions of scans.

Serving clients including AstraZeneca, Medtronic and Johnson & Johnson, it reaches some 15 million patients a year, with global deployment across low‑resource settings. Riding 60-70% annual revenue growth, Qure.ai is targeting profitability soon and aims to IPO within two years. Its excellence lies in clinical-grade AI for frontline diagnostics, speeding up care and reducing human bottlenecks in imaging across emerging markets.

 

HealthifyMe

 

Started in 2012 in Bengaluru by Tushar Vashisht, Mathew Cherian and Sachin Shenoy, HealthifyMe created India’s first comprehensive calorie‑tracking and wellness platform tailored to Indian diets. Its AI nutritionist “Ria” handles up to 80% of user queries and crafts personalised meal and exercise plans.

With features like ‘Snap’ to identify dishes from photos and expanding into mental wellness and food delivery integrations, HealthifyMe serves millions and recently raised $45 million to expand into the US. Its uniqueness lies in marrying localisation (Indian food habits) with strong AI, making it a standout in preventive and lifestyle health-tech.

 

 

Pristyn Care

 

Founded in August 2018 in Gurugram by Harsimarbir Singh, Dr Vaibhav Kapoor and Dr Garima Sawhney, Pristyn Care specialises in tech‑enabled elective surgeries and minimally invasive procedure delivery. With over 100 clinics and partnerships across 700 hospitals and 300 doctors in more than 40 cities, it became a unicorn in 2021 after raising $96 million in Series E and reported revenues exceeding ₹453 crore in FY23.

It offers end‑to‑end managed surgical care, from discovery to post-op, using standardised protocols, transparent pricing and partnerships with insurers for cashless claims. Its asset‑light but full‑stack operational model puts patient experience at its core, redefining surgery delivery for urban India.

 

Pharmeasy

 

Founded in 2015 in Mumbai by Dharmil Sheth and Dr. Namrata Singh, PharmEasy streamlined online pharmacy delivery and teleconsultation in one go. It quickly grew by offering doorstep delivery for medications, diagnostic tests at home and vaccine bookings.

What makes it successful is its reach, claims to serve over 12,000 pin codes, and a consumer-grade app that simplifies repeat prescriptions and lab bookings. With a series of bold acquisitions and continual innovation in last-mile delivery logistics, PharmEasy became a household name in India’s digital health space. The platform enjoys economies of scale and trust, recently securing unicorn status and expanding into pet care and health insurance verticals.

 

1Mg

 

Launched in 2015 in Gurugram by Prashant Tandon, Gaurav Agarwal, and Vikas Chauhan, 1mg became a trailblazer in transparent pricing, online medicines, lab tests and clinical content. Its standout strength is combining physical pharmacy partnerships with strong digital infrastructure, plus easy-to-understand drug information and doctor Q&A features.

From day one, 1mg differentiated itself by educating users – offering verified medical content and drug side‑effect info – and by ensuring cost and generic options are visible. This trust-focused, consumer-centric approach propelled it into unicorn territory. As of 2025, 1mg boasts millions of monthly users and a solid reputation for reliability, market-leading scale and deep user engagement.

MFine

 

MFine was founded in 2017 in Bengaluru by Prasad Kompalli and Ashutosh Lawania. This health-tech startup is redefining telemedicine through its AI-driven triage system that guides users to clinical advice within minutes. MFine partners with major hospitals and clinics to offer online consultations, lab services and health check bundles – all delivered digitally or at home.

It stands out thanks to its AI-first workflow, which cleverly filters and routes patients to specialists efficiently. With over 3 million consultations completed and on track for profitability, MFine blends strong tech infrastructure with medical-bureau credibility. By addressing urban and rural access gaps, MFine solidified its place among India’s top medtech innovators.

 

Zopper

 

Founded in 2018 in Bengaluru, Zopper Health is a fintech medtech company reimagining healthcare payments, insurance and pharmacy services via seamless digital platforms. Born out of parent company Zopper, it focuses on enabling health retailers and pharmacies with app-based credit, micro-insurance and telehealth integration.

Its uniqueness lies in digitising the otherwise cash-heavy pharmacy experience – customers can buy medicines on credit, access health insurance products at the point of sale, and use loyalty rewards. Serving thousands of pharmacies and millions of patients, Zopper Health’s tight fusion of fintech and pharmacy tech unlocks affordability and convenience in underserved markets. By 2025 it’s become a go-to enabler for pharmacy-led digital healthcare transformation in India.