FitXpert funding is a seven-figure strategic investment, and it confirms a simple market shift. Fitness trainers, nutrition centres, and clinics in MENA now pay for software that runs their daily work in one place, because manual setups break down once a business grows. FitXpert raised the round from Foras Investment under the 0107 Invest initiative to scale its fitness and nutrition SaaS platform across the region.
FitXpert started in 2023, founded by Mostafa Mahmoud and Salah Selim. The company says its platform helps fitness and nutrition businesses manage clients, design programmes, track progress, and handle follow-ups through one interface. That focus fits a wider pattern in wellness services where operators want fewer tools, less admin, and clearer records.
Wamda reports that Foras owner Mohamed Abouelnaga Negaty pointed to FitXpert’s performance, team quality, and scalability potential, and also linked the partnership to expansion into Gulf markets. That detail matters because Gulf expansion usually requires stronger support, onboarding, and partner access than a single country rollout.
FitXpert sells into a common operating problem in fitness and nutrition services. Many businesses start with tools that feel fast on day one, like chat apps and spreadsheets, then struggle when they need consistency across many clients.
A practical example comes from gym management commentary outside MENA. ClubRight describes how gyms often rely on WhatsApp and spreadsheets early on because they are familiar and cheap, then face friction as complexity grows, since information spreads across messages and documents, and simple tasks take longer. The same workflow pain shows up in many service businesses, including fitness coaching and nutrition follow-ups.
FitXpert’s pitch matches that problem. The company says it replaces fragmented and manual workflows with a unified system for managing clients and running programmes, which reduces the need to piece together tools.
FitXpert funding and what FitXpert builds
FitXpert describes its product as an end-to-end platform for fitness trainers, nutrition centres, and clinics. It covers client management, programme design, progress tracking, and follow-ups in a single interface. This matters because these tasks repeat for every client, so owners feel the time cost of poor systems every day.
Disrupt Africa also reports that FitXpert positions itself as infrastructure rather than a point solution. In practice, that means it wants to become the place where a business stores plans, tracks progress, and manages client communication, not a side tool that only handles one feature.
If you want a visual reference for readers, the FitXpert app listing provides a clear, simple way to show that the product exists beyond press coverage.
FitXpert funding use
FitXpert says it will use the new capital to enhance its technology stack, strengthen operations, and accelerate regional expansion. Those three uses map to the main risks in service software, since product depth alone does not carry a rollout if support and onboarding stay weak.
The SaaS News adds that the funding supports platform development, product expansion, institutional partnerships, and regional growth across the Gulf and wider MENA. That signals a push for larger partner channels, not only direct sales to single trainers.










