IKS Health, a Dallas-based healthcare software company, completed its $557 million acquisition of TruBridge on Thursday. The deal, first announced in April, brings the Mobile, Alabama-based startup — which sells EHR and revenue-cycle tools to hospitals — under IKS’ umbrella.
The deal combines TruBridge’s medical record-keeping technology with IKS’ tools for handling hospital paperwork and billing. IKS has said the real prize is TruBridge’s customer base, as the company has a strong footprint among small, rural hospitals. Those hospitals often can’t afford large in-house IT or billing staff, soTruBridge’s software is a cost-effective substitute.
With TruBridge on board, IKS now says it works with more than 150,000 clinicians and 2,000 healthcare organizations across the country.
“Through this market expansion, we are uniting capabilities that move us further toward our goal of a combined system of record and system of action workflow that uses explainable AI-driven and human-in-the loop solutions to reduce administrative friction, ease financial pressures and close critical gaps in patient care,” said IKS CEO Sachin Gupta in a statement.
The acquisition was funded largely through debt. IKS secured roughly $600 million in financing over five years from Citibank, JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank to cover the purchase. Under the deal terms, TruBridge shareholders received $26.25 in cash for each share of common stock they held. The added debt will raise IKS’ leverage, though the company has said it expects to bring that down as the combined business grows.
This is the third acquisition IKS had pursued this year. In March, it announced the acquihire of ThinkDTM, an AI-driven company focused on patient access. And in May, IKS bought ARAI to deepen its agentic AI infrastructure and decrease its reliance on third-party AI models.
These deals are part of a broader consolidation trend in healthcare technology, as companies look to combine electronic records, billing and AI tools into single platforms rather than selling them separately.
That shift is being driven in part by demand from rural hospitals, which are expected to keep outsourcing more administrative and technical work as they face continued financial and staffing pressures.
Photo: Witthaya Prasongsin, Getty Images
