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Fortune
Fortune
Leo Schwartz

Exclusive: Health tech startup Tennr raises $101 million Series C at $605 million valuation to fix the patient referral process

(Credit: Courtesy of Tennr)

Tennr cofounder Diego Baugh first encountered the nightmare of the patient referral system when he was hospitalized with stomach issues in college. He was told to meet with a specialist, but didn’t hear from them for six weeks. He decided not to schedule an appointment but was hospitalized again. Another six weeks went by before he heard from the specialist.

It turns out the issue is pervasive across the knotted bureaucracy that is the U.S. healthcare system. Delays, denials, and dropped services are common after the first line of medicine—primary care, urgent care, and emergency rooms—refer patients to specialists.

Baugh and his cofounders, Trey Holterman and Tyler Johnson, have been working to solve the problem since 2021, when they founded their startup, Tennr. The New York-based company has exploded over just a few short years, recently closing a $101 million Series C funding round, Fortune can exclusively report, less than a year after closing a $37 million Series B.

The new round, led by venture capital firm IVP with participation from new investors Google Ventures and Iconiq and existing investors Andreessen Horowitz and Lightspeed, values Tennr at $605 million, making it one of the fastest-growing health tech startups in a vertical increasingly dominated by artificial intelligence companies.

And while Tennr has built and trained its own proprietary model to help parse through patient documents and doctors’ notes, Holterman—who is Tennr’s CEO—said that he tries to avoid branding the company as yet another AI healthcare company.

“I want to talk about problems and I want to talk about solutions,” he told Fortune. “I don’t want to talk about just the technology.”

Referral headache

Before founding Tennr, Holterman had always been interested in healthcare, working as a software engineer at the Medicare platform Health IQ and the fitness company Strava. The idea for tackling patient referrals, however, was born out of his cofounder’s experience finding a specialist, as well as his mother, who works in family medicine, complaining about the problem over the years. “I probably should’ve just listened to my mom sooner, which I think is a tale everybody knows,” Holterman joked.

When he dug further, he learned that while one-third of Americans are referred for specialty care or some follow-up form of treatment every year, more than half of those never make it to the next step. The goal for Tennr was to create a system that would help decipher the convoluted web of paperwork to help automate the process, figuring out key details like eligibility, benefits, and payer rules.

Even before ChatGPT burst onto the scene in late 2022, Tennr’s founders began building their own specialized model, trained on tens of millions of medical documents and specifically designed for the use case of patient referrals. Holterman said that even with the growing popularity of generalized AI models from companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, Tennr’s is superior for this application because it is ingesting the hyper-specific type of information that wouldn’t make financial sense for broader competitors to pursue, like figuring out how to interpret the famously inscrutable doctor’s scrawl. “Betting on open source, betting on a proprietary data set that we’ve accumulated, continues to totally smash benchmarks,” Holterman said. (Tennr complies with regulations like HIPAA through de-identification.)

While the referral system may seem like a niche market, IVP partner Zeya Yang says that Tennr has found a strategic wedge where it can build out services for specialists, primary care physicians, and patients. Yang first invested in Tennr’s Series A when he was at Andreessen Horowitz and decided to lead its Series C after joining IVP in 2024.

He said that potential areas for growth for Tennr include tackling new subverticals within medical specialties, which is currently the company’s main customer base, as well as selling new tools within the referral workflow, like verifying insurance information. “This can be a very big company if they figure that sort of stuff out,” he told Fortune. Tennr is already expanding its product to create a network feature that allows both primary care physicians and patients to have visibility into the referral and payment process.

While Holterman declined to provide specific financial figures for the business, he said the company is in the eight figures of revenue, triple the level when it raised its Series B round in October. And as people, and companies, increasingly look at off-the-shelf solutions from AI for their medical needs, he’s betting that Tennr’s specialized approach will provide a better solution. “It’s not about automating work,” he said. “It’s really about making sure that the patient actually gets the service and understands what it’s going to cost, so that they show up.”

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