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Agentech raises $3 million to expand AI claims automation

Agentech's $3 million seed round landed in 30 days as it pushes into P&C, workers' comp and travel claims workflows.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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Agentech raises $3 million to expand AI claims automation
Source: insurtechinsights.com

Agentech has raised $3 million in seed funding in 30 days, and the real test now is whether its AI can live inside existing claims operations rather than sit on top of them. The company is pushing into property and casualty, workers' compensation and travel claims workflows, where carriers still lose time to intake, file review and repetitive back-office handling. That makes the round less about a headline valuation story and more about whether Agentech can cut adjuster touch time without creating new compliance or audit headaches.

The company was co-founded by Robin Roberson and Alex Pezold, former WeGoLook and TokenEx founders who previously exited ventures totaling $182 million. Agentech says its platform uses multimodal LLM capabilities and an ensemble of more than 100 digital agents to automate desk-adjuster work. The first target tasks are the dull but expensive ones: document review, compliance checks and data extraction. The next layer reaches into first notice of loss, reserving and file review, which is where software either disappears into the claims system or gets rejected as another awkward overlay.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Agentech is also leaning on early performance claims that matter to claims leaders trying to justify new software. Design partners were said to be seeing a 4x increase in output, 3-4x higher claims throughput without added labor and up to a 50% reduction in manual repetitive tasks. Those are the numbers that will matter in procurement, but they only count if the platform can move cleanly across existing claims platforms, preserve file history and keep human reviewers in the loop when judgment, liability or compliance questions surface.

The funding lands in a market that is already under pressure. Crawford said in March 2026 that U.S. claims providers were entering the year with catastrophe pressure, digitization, customer expectations and cost squeeze as the dominant forces, while noting that large carriers were moving beyond pilots and deploying RPA and digital FNOL at scale. McKinsey argued in May 2025 that P&C core systems built for a paper-driven model were no longer fit for purpose, citing operational inefficiencies, rising IT maintenance costs and pressure for faster claims payouts. Enlyte's June 2, 2026 Envision Trends Report said workers' compensation, auto casualty and auto physical damage claims are becoming more interconnected, and Verisk warned in May 2026 that nearly 400,000 insurance professionals could retire by the end of 2026, with 58% of frontline claims staff spending more than 20% of their time on manual data entry and compliance work. That is the backdrop Agentech now has to meet: not a demo, but production claims work that saves labor, speeds cycle times and survives scrutiny.

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