Syrian Healthtech Startup Moadna Raises $50K in Early Funding Round - إنت عربي
Syrian healthtech startup Moadna raised $50,000 in an early angel round at a $300,000 valuation to develop its clinic management and online appointment booking platform and prepare for a planned pre-seed round.
Syrian healthtech startup Moadna has raised $50,000 in an early angel funding round, valuing the company at $300,000. The platform — which focuses on clinic management and online appointment booking — will allocate the new capital to product development, strengthening technical infrastructure and expanding commercial operations as it prepares for a planned pre-seed round and wider regional growth.
"To date, more than 3,500 medical appointments have been booked through the platform," the company reported, underscoring early traction in a market with limited digital health infrastructure.
Moadna was founded by Tarek Shahata, Majed Hamdeh and a third co-founder whose name has not been disclosed. The startup offers an integrated management system that enables clinics, medical centers and healthcare providers to administer appointments, patient records, medical visits, invoices, revenues and expenses. In addition to back-office tools, Moadna provides digital booking and communication features intended to improve the way doctors connect with patients.
Market traction and unit metrics
- Users and clients: Moadna currently serves more than 550 doctors, clinics and medical centers and has a user base exceeding 8,000 users.
- Appointment volume: Over 3,500 medical appointments have been booked through the platform so far.
- Valuation and funding: The latest angel round injected $50,000 at a post-money valuation of $300,000.
The investment round is described as an early-stage injection from angel investors, positioned before a formal pre-seed fundraising push. Company leaders say the proceeds will be used to deepen product functionality, reinforce technical capacity and scale commercial activity across Syria — laying groundwork for a subsequent expansion into regional markets.
Moadna has recorded rapid growth within the Syrian market since its founding and participated in Thimar, a program aimed at supporting Syrian startups by helping entrepreneurs refine business models ahead of growth and fundraising milestones. Participation in such acceleration and support programs has become an important signal for early-stage investors seeking vetted teams and traction metrics in challenging markets.
Outlook
With a modest $50,000 injection and a $300,000 valuation, Moadna’s immediate challenge will be converting its existing base of 550+ medical clients and 8,000 users into scalable revenue streams while protecting platform reliability as appointment volume rises. The company’s emphasis on product development and infrastructure suggests it is prioritizing operational stability ahead of a pre-seed round that will be critical to any regional expansion.
If Moadna can continue to grow appointment throughput and demonstrate predictable monetization across clinics and medical centers, it could position itself as one of the more prominent Syrian-founded digital health platforms seeking to expand into neighboring markets. The coming months — and the structure of the planned pre-seed round — will determine whether the startup can translate early traction into a sustained growth trajectory.