- Blog
・ June 1, 2026
The SaaS Source: May 2026

This month’s roundup covers the latest innovations and developments from Japan’s SaaS industry, including a cloud hospital platform closing a ¥3 billion Series C on the back of new government digitization mandates, an all-in-one hospitality SaaS raising its Series A amid Japan’s inbound tourism surge, a sales AI agent attracting regional bank CVCs with early ARR traction and a CRM automation pitch and a seed-stage startup that lets SaaS companies plug generative AI camera vision into their existing products without building the infrastructure themselves.
Henry Raises ¥3 Billion to Accelerate AI-Powered Hospital Platform
PR Times reported (in Japanese) that Henry, a Tokyo-based developer of cloud-native hospital management systems, closed a Series C round totaling ¥3 billion on May 14, bringing cumulative funding to approximately ¥5.7 billion. The round was co-led by Angel Bridge, Globis Capital Partners and Japan Post Insurance Asset Management, with Coral Capital, JIC VGI, Suzuyo and Mpathy also participating.
Henry provides a unified cloud system combining electronic medical records, order management and medical billing for small and mid-sized hospitals, and plans to use the funds to expand into 200 to 500-bed facilities, build AI-powered auto-charting features and deepen its medical BPO offering. The raise coincides with revised medical law that took effect in April 2026, which for the first time requires cloud-native electronic medical records as the basis of Japan’s government-mandated push toward near-100% hospital digitization.
Check Inn Raises ¥200 Million to Digitize Independent Hotel Operations
The Bridge reported (in Japanese) that Check Inn, a Tokyo-based provider of all-in-one SaaS for small and mid-sized accommodation operators, raised ¥200 million in a Series A round on May 13, led by Theta Times Ventures with participation from Norinchukin Capital, bringing cumulative funding to approximately ¥350 million.
The platform integrates site controller, property management system and direct booking engine into a single product targeting boutique hotels, ryokan, resort villas and guesthouses. Japan’s accommodation sector faces mounting structural pressure as visitor arrivals exceeded 40 million in 2025 and the government targets 60 million by 2030, while operator profit margins and back-office efficiency remain well below global peers.
BellFace Brings in Banking CVCs for bellSalesAI Series E Second Close
The Bridge reported (in Japanese) that bellFace raised an undisclosed amount in the second close of its Series E round in March 2026, with investment from three regional bank CVCs: Shigin Capital Partners, Resona Capital and Higin Capital. The company’s bellSalesAI product is an autonomous AI agent that extracts and structures meeting conversation data then automatically inputs it into Salesforce, eliminating one of sales teams’ most persistent manual workflows.
At the time of the Series E first close in January 2026, the company reported ARR of several hundred million yen just 20 months after launch, with a stated target of ¥10 billion ARR within several years. The regional bank backing signals active expansion into Japan’s financial institution sales channel, where CRM data discipline has historically lagged.
MASO Closes ¥81.5 Million Seed Round for Generative AI Camera Platform
PR Times reported (in Japanese) that MASO, a Tokyo-based startup, raised ¥81.5 million from multiple angel investors in a seed round announced May 21. The company provides MitteFlow, a no-code platform that enables SaaS companies to embed camera-based generative AI image analysis into their existing products without building the underlying computer vision infrastructure themselves.
MitteFlow connects via REST API and Webhook, allowing SaaS vendors to add real-time physical-world detection and workflow automation to products that previously handled only digital inputs. The raise reflects growing demand from vertical SaaS vendors seeking to extend their data capture beyond desk-based workflows into physical environments such as factories, retail floors and construction sites.
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