Anomaly Insights, a developer of an AI-powered payer intelligence platform built to help healthcare providers predict claim line payments and potential denial reasons with over 99% accuracy, raised $17 million in new funding, bringing its total funding raised to date to $34 million.
Sound Ventures led the latest investment round with participation from Alumni Ventures, Link Ventures, Redesign Health, and RRE Ventures.
To date, Anomaly is deployed across 20+ health systems. Anomaly’s health system customers represent organizations that averaged over $4 billion in annual net patient revenue in 2024. The company works with health systems, large provider organizations, diagnostic laboratories, and outsourced RCM companies across the U.S.
“Providers lose billions every year to an information asymmetry that has defined payer-provider dynamics for decades,” said Juliette Bolea, Anomaly Insights board member and investor at Sound Ventures.
“Anomaly flips that dynamic, arming providers with the data and AI to negotiate from a position of strength. We invested because this is not an abstract market problem: every one of us is a patient eventually. When we change how payers and providers interact at scale, providers can focus on care, and patients are the ones who benefit,” added Juliette Bolea.
Mike Desjadon, CEO of Anomaly Insights, said: This funding accelerates our ability to give healthcare organizations something they have never had before: a platform that demonstrates how their payers actually behave, and the leverage to engage them as equals when it comes to contesting payment issues or contract negotiations.
AI-powered digital health software startups have secured billions of dollars in funding so far in 2026, according to our latest funding database.
More recently, Optura, a provider of an enterprise AI platform that helps healthcare organizations quickly assess the business value of AI and prioritize AI investments in real time, raised $17.5 million in a Series A round. In another deal, XCaliber Health, a developer of an agentic operating system purpose-built to reduce administrative burden and improve the quality of clinical care delivered to patients, raised $6.5 million in Seed funding.