Rem3dy Health raises £14M at £84M valuation to take 3D-printed personalised vitamins global

The Birmingham-based maker of Nourished, the 3D-printed personalised vitamin gummy brand sold in Boots and over 12,000 European pharmacies, closed a round led by Suntory, Estrella Galicia, Apollo Hospitals, and UPSA as it targets the US, India, and the Middle East


Rem3dy Health raises £14M at £84M valuation to take 3D-printed personalised vitamins global Image by: Nourished

TL;DR

Rem3dy Health raised £14M at an £84M valuation from Suntory, Apollo Hospitals, Estrella Galicia, and UPSA to expand its Nourished vitamin brand globally.

Birmingham-based Rem3dy Health, the parent company of personalised vitamin brand Nourished, has raised £14 million at a valuation of £84 million in a round backed by a mix of global strategic investors. The round was led by Japanese beverage and wellness group Suntory, Spanish brewing conglomerate Estrella Galicia, Indian healthcare provider Apollo Hospitals, and French pharmaceutical company UPSA. Future Planet Capital Regional, which manages the West Midlands Co-Investment Fund, also participated.

The company plans to use the funds to enter the US, MENA region, and India, while also expanding into personalised health solutions for pets. Rem3dy Health already sells Nourished products in Boots, Holland & Barrett, and more than 12,000 pharmacies across Europe, and has built its manufacturing around 3D printing technology that has seen patent filings grow eight times faster than the average across all other sectors. The company says it has sold more than 53 million units since launching in 2020.

Founded in 2019 by Melissa Snover, a registered nutritionist and serial entrepreneur, Rem3dy Health uses patented 3D printing to produce seven-layer vegan gummy stacks customised to individual health goals. Customers complete a questionnaire and an algorithm recommends a combination from what the company says are more than 10 million possible nutrient configurations. The gummies are then printed on demand at the company’s facility, which Snover says can produce 500,000 units per day.

Securing this funding marks a major milestone for us,” Snover said. “Following a year of significant transformation and against one of the toughest fundraising environments in recent years, we are now in a strong position to scale globally.” The company previously raised approximately £19 million across earlier rounds, according to reporting by VoxelMatters, making this its largest single fundraise to date.

The investor mix signals cross-sector interest in personalised nutrition, a category that has attracted growing attention from strategic investors and athletes alike. Apollo Hospitals operates more than 70 hospitals and 6,000 pharmacies across India, giving Rem3dy Health a potential distribution partner in one of its target markets. Estrella Galicia’s participation suggests the Spanish company is looking beyond its core brewing and food business into health-adjacent categories.

Rupert Lyle, Investment Director at Future Planet Capital Regional and Fund Principal of the West Midlands Co-Investment Fund, said the round reflects the company’s trajectory. “When we first invested in Rem3dy, it was clear they were developing a truly disruptive brand and technology capable of revolutionising the global wellness industry,” Lyle said. Future Planet Capital Regional previously invested £500,000 in Rem3dy Health in September 2025 through the West Midlands Co-Investment Fund, a £25 million vehicle backed equally by the West Midlands Combined Authority and the West Midlands Pension Fund.

The round fits within a broader pattern of investor interest in companies that combine data, personalisation, and technology to deliver health services at scale. Whether Rem3dy Health’s 3D-printed gummies represent a genuine advance in nutritional science or a well-packaged consumer wellness product is a question the company will need to answer as it moves into markets where regulatory scrutiny of health claims tends to be more rigorous than in the UK.

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