Saudi Agritech Startup Nabt Secures Fresh Funding to Fix Fresh-Produce Supply Chains
From Farm to Chef: A Pain Point Hiding in Plain Sight
When a Riyadh restaurant owner received inconsistent produce deliveries three weeks in a row, she realized her biggest business risk wasn’t cuisine—it was supply chain reliability. Across Saudi Arabia, restaurants, hotels, markets, and catering firms often struggle with inconsistent quality, unpredictable supply, and fluctuating prices in fresh produce.
Nabt was created to solve exactly this problem.
The Raise: US$ 3.4 M to Scale a New Kind of Agricultural Infrastructure
Nabt has raised US$ 3.4 million in a Seed extension round, strengthening its mission to build a more transparent, efficient, and technology-enabled fresh-produce ecosystem in Saudi Arabia.
The company will channel the capital toward scaling logistics, onboarding more farmers, expanding its B2B marketplace, and optimizing delivery operations.
What Nabt Solves
Nabt’s platform directly connects farmers with businesses—removing unnecessary intermediaries and reducing inefficiencies that have historically weakened the Kingdom’s agricultural sector.
Buyers get:
- Transparent pricing
- Consistent quality
- Reliable, same-day delivery
Farmers get:
- Direct access to demand
- Better margins
- Real-time analytics and tracking tools
Why It Matters for Saudi Arabia
With food security emerging as a national priority, Saudi Arabia continues to back local agritech solutions that reduce reliance on imports and strengthen domestic supply chains. Nabt’s model supports Vision 2030 ambitions for agricultural sustainability and economic diversification.
What’s Next
The fresh funding positions Nabt to expand nationwide, build deeper logistics capabilities, and emerge as a key player in Saudi Arabia’s food-supply infrastructure.
Editor’s Note — The Startups MENA Team
At Startups MENA, we track how innovation reshapes foundational industries—food, logistics, infrastructure, and supply chains. Nabt’s growth represents more than a funding milestone; it reflects a maturing agritech ecosystem in Saudi Arabia.
As the Kingdom accelerates toward Vision 2030, the narrative is shifting from agricultural dependency to agricultural intelligence—where farmers, buyers, and technology work together to secure the nation’s food future.
— The Startups MENA Editorial Team
