Claroty is a cybersecurity company that builds a unified platform to secure cyber-physical systems (CPS) across industrial (OT), healthcare (IoMT), commercial (IoT), and public sector environments, collectively termed the Extended Internet of Things (XIoT).[1][2][3][5] Its platform delivers visibility into assets, risk and vulnerability management, threat detection, network protection, and secure remote access, integrating with existing infrastructure for on-premise or cloud deployment via Claroty xDome and Continuous Threat Detection (CTD).[1][3][5] Serving over 1,000 customers including 24 Fortune 100 companies like General Motors, BHP, and Yale New Haven Health System, Claroty addresses critical infrastructure protection by identifying assets, detecting anomalies, and enabling rapid response to threats, ensuring operational continuity.[3][6] With over $500 million in funding, $100+ million ARR in 2023, 700+ employees across 25 countries, and deployments at thousands of global sites, the company demonstrates strong growth momentum.[3]
Founded in 2015 and headquartered in New York City (with U.S. Federal HQ in Northern Virginia), Claroty emerged to tackle rising threats to mission-critical cyber-physical systems amid industrial digitalization.[3][4] A pivotal moment came in 2021 with the acquisition of Medigate, which nearly doubled its size and expanded into healthcare IoMT security, forming the basis for the xDome SaaS offering.[3] Backed by major investors including Standard Investments and industrial vendors, Claroty has evolved from OT-focused protection to a comprehensive XIoT platform, celebrating 10 years in 2025 with CEO Yaniv Vardi highlighting its role in safeguarding society.[3] Early traction built through deep asset discovery innovations and partnerships, like with Mission IT for U.S. defense and intelligence, aligning with federal mandates such as Zero Trust and OT/IT convergence.[4]
Claroty stands out in CPS security through:
Claroty rides the surge in XIoT connectivity, where industrial digital transformation exposes legacy CPS to sophisticated nation-state threats targeting critical infrastructure like energy, manufacturing, and healthcare.[1][3][4] Timing aligns with escalating mandates (e.g., EO 14028, NDAA 1505, White House Cyber Strategy) and OT/IT convergence, enabling agencies to optimize operations while mitigating connectivity risks.[4][6] Market forces favoring Claroty include rising ransomware against CPS, regulatory pressures for resilience, and the shift to cloud-hybrid models, positioning it to influence ecosystem standards through its partner network, intelligence sharing, and innovations that extend IT security into operational technology.[2][6][7]
Claroty's trajectory points to expanded dominance in CPS security, leveraging its platform's breadth to capture more public sector and global defense contracts amid intensifying geopolitical cyber risks.[3][4] Trends like AI-driven threat detection, Zero Trust maturation, and XIoT proliferation will propel growth, potentially pushing ARR past $200 million as it innovates on xDome and forges deeper alliances.[3][5] Its influence may evolve by setting de facto standards for CPS visibility, much like it has redefined protection for mission-critical systems—ensuring connected organizations remain secure in an increasingly vulnerable industrial revolution.[3][7]
Claroty has raised $632.0M in total across 4 funding rounds.
Claroty's investors include Bee Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Illuminate Financial Management, Jude Gomila Rolling Fund, Jump Crypto, KRM Interests LLC, Ponte Partners, Team8, Virta Ventures, Wealthing VC Club, Y Combinator, Immad Akhund.
Claroty has raised $632.0M across 4 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $400.0M Series E in December 2021.