A Dubai startup just raised $11 million to convince landlords that monthly rent won't break their business.
Keyper closed an $11 million Series A on July 9, led by Vienna-based Speedinvest, according to the company's funding announcement. NeoVentures, the corporate venture arm of Mashreq, joined the round, alongside Middle East Venture Partners, the Dubai Future District Fund, Property Finder, Arab National Bank, Ellington Properties, Dar Ventures and Abbey Road Investment Group. That's an unusually long investor list for an $11 million check. It isn't a bet on an app. It's a bet on rewiring how a region pays rent.
Here's the problem Keyper is chasing. Across the UAE, tenants have traditionally paid for a full year of rent in one to four postdated cheques, handed over when they sign the lease. Landlords like it. They get their money upfront. Tenants hate it. It means finding thousands of dirhams in a single lump sum, often before a paycheck has even cleared. If one of those cheques bounces, you're not just dealing with an awkward late fee. You're dealing with legal enforcement and a landlord who already holds the paper trail. That's the system Keyper, founded in 2022 by Omar Abu Innab and Walid Al Saqqaf, set out to dismantle.
The mechanism is simple to describe and harder to fund. Tenants pay Keyper monthly. Landlords still get their annual rent upfront, in full. Keyper fronts the gap itself, then embeds financing and other services on top of that cash flow relationship. It's a working-capital business wearing a consumer app's clothing, and working-capital businesses live or die on how cheaply they can raise money to lend out.
The Numbers Behind the Round
The numbers suggest the model is working. Keyper says it has financed more than $44 million in rent value since launch, including $19 million in 2026 alone. That's a sharp move. Roughly half this year's volume has already matched what took the company its first several years to build. The platform now supports over 10,500 properties valued at more than $6 billion, serves 4,000 landlords, and has passed 100,000 app downloads.
This Series A doesn't stand alone. It follows a $30 million Sukuk financing deal with Franklin Templeton, structured to comply with Islamic finance rules that prohibit interest-based lending. That detail matters in the Gulf, where a large share of institutional capital needs Sharia-compliant instruments before it can participate at all. Combined with an earlier $4 million pre-Series A round led by Beco Capital and Middle East Venture Partners, Keyper's total funding now stands at $56 million.
Why the Investor List Matters More Than the Number
Frankly, the investor list is the more interesting story than the round size. Property Finder isn't a typical venture fund. It's one of the Gulf's best-known property listings portals, the place many renters and buyers already use before they talk to an agent. Its participation looks less like a passive bet and more like a company making sure it has a stake in the payments layer that could sit closer to the transaction. Arab National Bank and Mashreq's NeoVentures bring balance-sheet credibility that a pure fintech play would struggle to earn on its own.
None of this means the hard part is finished. Keyper's business depends on continuing to raise cheap capital to front rent payments at scale, and that only gets tougher as volumes climb into the billions rather than the tens of millions. A single bad stretch of landlord defaults, or a tightening in regional credit markets, would test the model. A funding announcement never does.
The company's own numbers show why investors are willing to take that risk now. Keyper says it financed $19 million in roughly six months of 2026, against $44 million total since 2022. For a rent-financing company, that acceleration makes the Series A look overdue rather than premature. You don't need to love the model to see why the check arrived.
What Keyper is really selling isn't convenience. It's a rewrite of who carries the liquidity risk in a rental transaction that, across the Gulf, has for decades defaulted to the tenant. If it can keep financing that gap at scale, it will have changed a piece of financial plumbing most people never think about. Not until the day the cheque is due.
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