Sendance, a Brno-based deep-tech company making sensors for medical and assistive devices, has raised several hundred thousand euros, bringing its total funding to €2.6 million. The investment is a convertible loan in the company’s ongoing third financing round, as Vestbee was informed.
- Established in 2021 by Robert Koeppe, Sendance develops sensor systems for medical and assistive devices. Its technology consists of thin, flexible sensor grids that can be embedded in textiles, foam, or 3D-printed materials. These grids measure pressure, force, temperature, and motion, and transmit the data to a cloud-based platform for aggregation and analysis.
- The system allows device manufacturers to monitor physical interactions and movement in real time. Different sensor types can be combined in a single grid, which is connected to the cloud for data visualization, recording, and integration with external platforms. The workflow supports iterative development, from design and prototyping to testing and production, while enabling compliance with medical-data regulations.
- By linking hardware with data management, Sendance provides a way to capture and analyze health and mobility metrics from wearable devices.
Details of the deal
- The new investment was led by Garage Angels, a Brno-based network of experienced entrepreneurs and angel investors that supports early-stage startups with capital and hands-on expertise, with support from existing investor Electron Capital Partners.
“Personalized and smart medical devices represent one of the key trends of the future. Sendance offers a technologically scalable and highly adaptable solution and is led by an experienced second-time founder, Robert Koeppe, who has a clear vision and the ability to execute it. This combination is what convinced us to invest in the company,” explains Miloš Dendis of Garage Angels.
- The investment will enable the firm to strengthen its sales and marketing capabilities, scale its sensor and data platform, and accelerate adoption of its technology among medical and assistive device manufacturers.





