Halodoc has raised $100.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Halodoc's investors include Accel, Inspired Capital, Khosla Ventures, Openspace Ventures, Square Peg Capital, Aleksander Leonard Larsen, Daniela Binatti, Jannick Malling, Leif Abraham, Sergio Jimenez, Sujata Bhatia.
Halodoc is a leading Indonesian healthtech startup founded in 2016, offering a mobile app that connects millions of users—over 20 million monthly active users—with more than 22,000 general practitioners, 1,200+ pharmacies, labs, insurance providers, and clinics.[1][2][7] It serves patients across Indonesia, particularly in rural areas, by solving healthcare access barriers through 24/7 teleconsultations via chat, voice, or video; prescription-based medicine delivery (often within 45 minutes via partners like Gojek); at-home lab services; and insurance integration.[1][2][3][5] With strong growth momentum, Halodoc has raised significant funding, including a Series D round led by Astra International ($100 million, totaling $135 million from Astra), and partnerships with the Gates Foundation and the Indonesian government for vaccination efforts, positioning it as Indonesia's top healthcare brand online and offline.[2][4][6]
Halodoc was founded in 2016 in Jakarta, Indonesia, by Jonathan Sudharta, who drew from his experience as a pharmaceutical sales representative witnessing long patient wait times and healthcare inefficiencies.[6] The idea emerged from observing these access gaps in Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest market, prompting Sudharta to create a telehealth platform linking patients to professionals, clinics, labs, and pharmacies.[1][6] Early traction came rapidly post-launch, with the app scaling to tens of millions of users; pivotal moments include a 2019 Thoughtworks partnership for scalable insurance onboarding (delivered in phases through 2020, enabling days-long integrations and efficient claims), Gates Foundation Series B-1 investment in 2019, and COVID-19 leadership as the first government partner vaccinating across 400 locations.[1][4][6] This mission-driven focus attracted talent committed beyond financial incentives.[6]
Halodoc rides the digital health wave in Indonesia, addressing systemic inefficiencies like doctor shortages and rural access gaps amid a population exceeding 270 million, amplified by COVID-19's telehealth acceleration.[1][4][6] Timing is ideal: Southeast Asia's startup boom, government digital health pushes (e.g., vaccination partnerships), and rising smartphone penetration favor platforms like Halodoc, which systemically improves affordability and quality for 100M+ Indonesians.[4][5][6] Market forces include investor confidence (e.g., Astra's $135M commitment) and tech integrations (AWS, Gojek), positioning it as a leader in online-to-offline health delivery; it influences the ecosystem by setting standards for hybrid care, inspiring competitors, and partnering with ministries/pharma for nationwide impact.[2][4][7]
Halodoc's trajectory points to dominance in Indonesia's healthtech, expanding from treatment to sickness prevention via predictive tools, deeper insurance ties, and offline expansions.[6] Trends like AI-driven personalization, regulatory tailwinds, and regional scaling (beyond Indonesia) will shape it, potentially evolving into a Southeast Asian powerhouse with sustained AWS-backed growth and mission-led innovations.[6][7] As Jonathan Sudharta envisioned from those waiting rooms, Halodoc exemplifies how tech humanizes healthcare, delivering game-changing access where it matters most.[1][6]
Halodoc has raised $100.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $100.0M Series D in July 2023.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 1, 2023 | $100.0M Series D | Accel, Inspired Capital, Khosla Ventures, Openspace Ventures, Square Peg Capital, Aleksander Leonard Larsen, Daniela Binatti, Jannick Malling, Leif Abraham, Sergio Jimenez, Sujata Bhatia |