Dubai just showed the world what happens when one of the best universities on the planet joins forces with one of the most ambitious tech cities in the Middle East. Dubai Silicon Oasis (DSO) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has just wrapped up the third cohort of the MIT DesignX Dubai Accelerator Program (MDXB) with a packed Demo Day held at DSO’s campus. Eleven startups walked through it. Three walked out with cash prizes and a business setup deal in hand.
The program runs in partnership with Global Growth Hub (GGH), and together the three partners have built something rare. This is not a typical pitch competition. It is a structured, months-long program that takes early-stage founders and gives them the tools, the mentors, and the access they need to build real businesses. The third cohort tackled some of the most pressing challenges in tech today, spanning artificial intelligence, healthcare, sustainable materials, autonomous systems, and workforce management.
How the MIT DesignX Dubai Program Actually Works
MITdesignX started in 2016 inside MIT’s School of Architecture and Planning. Today it sits within the MIT Morningside Academy for Design. The core idea behind the program is that the best solutions to the world’s biggest problems come from combining design thinking with hard science and smart business planning. That formula has travelled well beyond Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The Dubai edition, known as MDXB, brings that same framework to the Middle East. Founders in the program take part in intensive workshops and mentoring sessions led by MIT faculty. MIT student interns also work directly alongside the startup teams. This gives the founders access to fresh technical thinking while giving the students hands-on, real-world experience. The program connects participants to investors, corporate partners, and government stakeholders inside Dubai’s innovation ecosystem.
During the first phase, founders work through business design, product development, and go-to-market strategy. They refine their prototypes, test whether their ideas hold up commercially, and prepare investor-ready presentations. At the end of the phase, they present at Demo Day to a room full of people who can actually move the needle for their businesses.
Inside the Third Cohort’s Competitive Selection
Gaining a spot in the MDXB program is not easy. Organizers ran a competitive application process for the third cohort and chose just 11 startups from a much larger pool of applicants. Notably, nearly half of the selected ventures came from outside the UAE entirely. That detail speaks to the program’s growing international reputation.
The third cohort brought together founders working across five sectors: artificial intelligence, healthcare, sustainable materials, autonomous systems, and workforce technologies. These are not niche areas. They sit at the center of where global technology investment is heading right now. Startups building in these spaces face high expectations and even higher competition. The fact that this cohort tackled all five is a strong signal of the program’s ambition.
Three Startups That Stood Out on Demo Day
At the conclusion of the program, a total of AED 100,000 in equity-free funding went to the three top-performing startups. Each of the three winners also received a one-year Dubai Silicon Oasis business setup package. Equity-free funding matters enormously to early-stage founders. They get the capital without giving away a slice of their company.
Katrix took first place. The company builds a cloud-independent, real-time AI perception platform designed for autonomous systems and smart infrastructure. The platform pulls together data from multiple sensors, including LiDAR, RADAR, GNSS, and vision systems. It then processes that data on-device using AI, without relying on a cloud connection. This matters in safety-critical environments where a delay or connectivity issue could have serious consequences. Katrix targets mobility and industrial applications where machines need to understand their surroundings accurately and instantly.
Wellmatix earned second place. The company accelerates the research and development of sustainable materials and chemical solutions by combining machine learning with scientific validation. Traditional materials R&D cycles take years. Wellmatix compresses that timeline by letting AI drive faster experimentation and commercial readiness. One of its focus areas is carbon capture innovation, which places the company squarely inside one of the most urgent areas of climate technology.
Nashid secured third place. The startup addresses a real operational problem in industrial and construction sectors. It verifies that workers on-site hold the right credentials and meet safety compliance requirements. Industries like construction run on large, rotating workforces. Managing who is on-site and whether they are qualified is a persistent challenge that carries real safety and legal consequences. Nashid brings digital verification and compliance tracking to solve it.
The Startups That Also Earned Recognition
Beyond the top three, two more startups earned one-year DSO business setup packages in recognition of their scalable, impact-focused work.
Apollo Medica combines AI and wearable technology to improve rehabilitation outcomes for patients. The company positions technology as a support tool for the recovery process, giving clinicians and patients better visibility into progress. The B.E. Story takes a different approach entirely. The company develops bioenzyme-based solutions that convert organic waste into eco-friendly cleaning products. It turns a waste problem into a product, addressing both environmental impact and commercial opportunity at the same time.
What MIT’s Global Track Record Adds to This
The strength of the MDXB program does not rest on the Dubai edition alone. Since MITdesignX launched in 2016, the program has supported more than 200 ventures across five continents. The portfolio of companies that have come through its program now carries a collective valuation exceeding one billion dollars. That number reflects the quality of what the program produces, not just the prestige of the institution behind it.
MITdesignX has previously run venture-building programs in Iceland, Italy, Mexico, and Hong Kong. The Dubai program extends that global network further into the MENA region. For founders in the Middle East, gaining access to the MIT ecosystem, its faculty, its research networks, and its alumni is a meaningful advantage.
Gilad Rosenzweig, Executive Director of MITdesignX, put it directly: “The third cohort has demonstrated not only remarkable talent, but also a strong commitment to developing solutions that deliver meaningful impact across the region and beyond. Initiatives such as this demonstrate how mentorship, collaboration and access to the right resources can transform bold technology ideas into ventures ready to scale.”
A Program That Builds More Than Startups
The MIT DesignX Dubai program is not just producing funded startups. It is building a pipeline of founders who understand how to design solutions at scale. Each cohort trains a new generation of entrepreneurs who carry MIT’s research-led, design-first methodology into the region’s market. That transfer of knowledge compounds over time.
The third cohort’s diversity strengthens this further. Founders who came from outside the UAE brought perspectives, problems, and networks that are not native to the Gulf. Their presence in the program means the solutions developed here speak to a wider set of global challenges, not just regional ones. Nearly half of this cohort built their businesses elsewhere before choosing Dubai as their launchpad.
With a fourth cohort expected to follow, the program appears set to grow both in size and in the quality of the ventures it produces. For founders watching from the outside, the path into the program runs through a competitive application process that filters for technical seriousness, commercial viability, and a genuine commitment to impact.
The third cohort of the MIT DesignX Dubai Accelerator Program closed with 11 stronger startups, three prize-winning teams, and a clear reminder that some of the world’s most interesting technical problems are now getting solved in Dubai.










