Tava Health Raises $40M Series C to Expand Tech-Driven Mental Health Services Across All 50 States
Funding Details
$40M
Series C
Healthcare has a habit of overcomplicating what should be simple, then calling it innovation. Tava Health saw the gridlock, stepped over it, and locked in $40M in Series C funding to keep things moving at a pace the system isn’t used to.
The round was led by Centana Growth Partners, with Catalyst Investors, Blue Heron Capital, Peterson Ventures, and Springtide Ventures doubling down. Repeat investors don’t show up out of loyalty, they show up when the model keeps proving itself under pressure.
Under the hood, this isn’t just another mental health platform trying to win on access alone. Dallen Allred, Co-Founder and CEO, alongside Jason Ockey, Co-Founder and COO, and Spencer Gardner, Co-Founder and CTO, have built Tava Health into something closer to infrastructure than a point solution. The kind that connects providers, employers, and payers without forcing any of them to change how they operate just to make it work.
The numbers hold their weight. Over 200 health plans. Coverage across all 50 states. Reach into 9 out of 10 commercially insured Americans. First session in as little as 12 hours. And 87% of clients showing measurable clinical improvement. That’s not positioning, that’s execution showing up on time.
Then you look at the stack. Symphony gives clinicians a system that handles documentation, scheduling, and billing without turning their day into admin work. TavaCare lets employers offer mental health support without introducing new cost friction. Tava Guide brings health plans into the loop so referrals don’t stall out halfway through the process. Each layer solves a different problem, but together they start to look like a system that actually moves.
The takeaway is simple, even if the build wasn’t. Tava Health didn’t chase attention, they built alignment. Providers get paid faster. Employers remove barriers. Health plans see outcomes instead of guesswork. When incentives line up, adoption follows without forcing it.
$73M in total funding tells part of the story. The rest is in how quietly this model scales. No theatrics, no overpromising, just steady pressure on a system that’s been overdue for it.









