Medical-device maker Dyme raises a $10M Series A
The Austin company, which builds commercial medical products for healthcare providers, drew a Series A led by Umami Capital.

AUSTIN — Dyme, a developer of commercial medical products and devices for healthcare providers, has raised $10 million in a Series A round led by Umami Capital, according to deal disclosures compiled this month. The financing brings the company's total funding to roughly $12.85 million.
Dyme operates in the medical-device segment, building products used by clinicians and provider organizations. As with many device companies at this stage, its path runs through product development, regulatory clearances and commercial rollout, and the Series A gives it runway to push on those fronts.
Why it matters
Austin's health-technology scene is often associated with software and AI, but device makers like Dyme represent the harder, more capital-intensive end of the same ecosystem. Funding rounds in this category tend to translate into local engineering, manufacturing and regulatory jobs, and they deepen the city's standing as a health-tech hub beyond its digital-health startups.
Reported by Next in Austin. Based on reporting from Texas CEO Magazine.
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