Greater Good Health Raises $20.5M in Series B Funding to Expand Value-Based Primary Care Clinics
Greater Good Health is chasing something rarer in American healthcare: outcomes that actually live up to the name. This week Greater Good Health pulled in $20.5M in Series B funding, led by Allumia Ventures, with DaVita Venture Group and Granite Financial Holdings, the investment affiliate of Blue Cross of Idaho, stepping into the mix. The familiar crew doubled down too, including Flare Capital Partners, Optum Ventures, LRVHealth, Health Velocity Capital, Martin Ventures, and Epsilon Health Investors. On top of that equity round sits a venture debt facility of up to $12.5M from HSBC Innovation Banking. Translation for the non Wall Street crowd: serious believers, serious capital, and a balance sheet built to move.
Credit where it is due. Congratulations to CEO and Founder Sylvia Hastanan and the leadership team including COO Jared Campbell and CMO Tyler Jung, MD. Building a healthcare company that claims the moral high ground is easy marketing. Building one that delivers measurable results is where the grownups show up.
Greater Good Health operates with a nurse practitioner centric model designed for value based care and the populations that need it most. Adults on Medicare, underserved communities, patients who tend to show up in the system when things have already gone sideways. The company partners with risk bearing organizations and health plans, deploying integrated clinical services and opening primary care clinics where access has historically been thin.
The proof lives in the numbers. More than 200,000 patients served. Quality performance exceeding 4+ STAR ratings. Preventive care engagement up more than 200%. Unnecessary acute admissions trending down. Net Promoter Score north of 90, which in healthcare is practically a standing ovation. That kind of performance does not happen by accident. It happens when clinical design, operations, and incentives finally start rowing in the same direction.
The physical footprint tells its own story. The first 3 clinics landed in Montana through a partnership with Humana, in Missoula, Billings, and Great Falls. In Dec 2025 the 4th clinic opened in Idaho with Blue Cross of Idaho. Not Manhattan. Not Silicon Valley. The places where access gaps are real and the mission actually matters.
There is a lesson buried in this round that founders should not miss. Capital did not show up because the pitch deck was clever. It showed up because the model works, the outcomes are measurable, and the partnerships with payers prove the economics hold up in the real world.
In a healthcare system that often feels like a maze designed by accountants, Greater Good Health is quietly building something simpler. Care that works. Data that proves it. And a business model that turns the phrase greater good into something you can actually measure.









