Enzo Health is building what it calls the first agentic EHR for home health, a system designed to do the operational work rather than just record it. Founded in 2024 and led by co-founder and CEO Zach Newman, the company targets home health and post-acute care providers, a segment under intense pressure from the aging US population, also called the silver tsunami, and chronic staffing shortages. Enzo's thesis is that home health agencies cannot hire their way out of growing demand, so the software itself must take on the front-office, clinical, and back-office workload.
Unlike traditional home health EHRs paired with stacks of point solutions, Enzo consolidates the full episode into one AI-native system. Its agents automate eligibility verification, scheduling, visit documentation, claims processing, and reimbursement, connecting referral intake all the way through to payment. The company frames this as connecting referral to reimbursement in a single platform, which is significant in home health where fragmented tools and heavy regulatory requirements create both administrative burden and compliance risk.
A core promise is helping agencies grow census, the number of patients served, without adding headcount, by removing the manual coordination and documentation tasks that limit capacity. Because home health is heavily regulated, Enzo emphasizes minimizing regulatory risk as agents handle documentation and billing, an important consideration for agencies subject to strict Medicare and state rules.
Enzo Health announced $26 million in total funding, including a $20 million Series A led by N47, with participation from Gradient, Tandem Ventures, Rigby Watts, Lionel Partners, and Soma, disclosed in May 2026. The company is using the capital to expand its platform from home health into adjacent post-acute settings such as skilled nursing and hospice care.
For home health and post-acute providers, Enzo Health offers an integrated, agent-driven alternative to the legacy EHR-plus-point-solutions model, with the key questions being depth of regulatory safeguards, accuracy of automated billing, and how quickly agencies can migrate from incumbent systems.