Medical equipment startup Pulse secures $4 M Seed funding from 30ne4 Capital

Incubate Fund Asia, Stride Ventures, and other angel investors participated in a $4 million seed funding round led by 3one4 Capital for the medical equipment startup Pulse.
According to a press release from Pulse, the new funds will be used to establish an R&D hub, expedite product development, obtain regulatory certifications, and expand distribution throughout India.
Pulse is a full-stack medical equipment manufacturing company that was co-founded in 2025 by Anshul Sharma and Nishant Goel. It designs, sources, and distributes reasonably priced, globally compliant medical equipment and consumables. By providing product design, quality systems, regulatory compliance, service infrastructure, and market access, the company collaborates closely with India’s MSME manufacturing ecosystem.
Focusing on low- and mid-complexity medical equipment and consumables categories, the Bengaluru-based startup hopes to establish a sizable horizontal OEM from India that serves a variety of medical equipment categories for both domestic and international markets. The global medical devices market is estimated to be worth more than $550 billion, according to market research.
By combining MSME manufacturing capacity, standardizing products, guaranteeing quality and regulatory compliance, and creating a reliable, service-backed brand and distribution layer, Pulse fills this gap. The company unlocks scale for Indian manufacturers and enables globally compliant products at competitive price points by combining engineering, supply chain orchestration, compliance, and go-to-market execution under a single operating model.
Pulse’s initial focus is on providing dependable products in specific categories, like critical care and renal care, to mid-tier hospitals in India with 50–200 beds. The business intends to grow horizontally by adding more medical specialties and expanding product portfolios within each category, as well as by entering larger hospitals and corporate hospital chains.




