Summer funding pushes CarePilot to team hires, AI accolades, healthtech product launch
November 4, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Fresh off its summer capital infusion, a Kansas City-built AI startup that helps doctors focus on patients instead of administrative tasks is earning industry recognition and dropping another new product, said Joseph Tutera, sharing credit for the milestones with behind-the-scenes talent.
“We have a young team and they don’t have the encumbrance of a prior way of doing things,” explained Tutera, founder and CEO of CarePilot. “They can come in and completely rethink how we organize a team in a world where any given engineer can be 50 percent more productive. That’s where CarePilot is really lucky.”
But it wasn’t luck that helped the Kansas City-based healthtech startup hit 100 billion in OpenAPI tokens processed — the building blocks of text for OpenAI models — earning a shoutout at OpenAI DevDay in October for being in the top 75 for overall utilization out of about four million developers on the OpenAI platform.
It’s an achievement reserved for very few companies, Tutera said, noting CarePilot was one of only two ambient AI companies to do it — and the only one in the Midwest.
“That validates our products,” he added. “We are continuing to see real product market fit.”
ICYMI: Investors laud emerging founder’s expertise as CarePilot logs $2.5M for AI healthtech tool
Following the previous launches of CarePilot’s AI notetaker and coding assistant for physicians, the team is preparing to drop an order entry assistant, and Tutera teased an upcoming exciting partnership that will be announced in the next few weeks.
“We’ll do the charting, we’ll do the ordering, we’ll do the coding. You go be a doctor,” he explained of the value to physicians behind the soon-to-launch efforts. “We’re one step closer to that when we release this product.”
The startup already offers the first AI-native clinical interface for Electronic Health Records (EHRs), providing a “touchless” experience that automates more than 90 percent of provider EHR time — streamlining administrative tasks and reducing burnout.
CarePilot — started in 2023 while Tutera was a student at Texas Christian University – focuses on enhancing clinical documentation, coding, inbox management, and chart finalization, addressing widespread inefficiencies in today’s healthcare IT systems.
“In a world where the regulatory environment is more discrete, data needs to be captured more often, the burden ultimately falls on the provider to do that,” Tutera said. “You now have this machine intelligence that — with the appropriate product engineering and with the appropriate guidance and instruction — can do very specific administrative tasks. Then you can stitch them all together to create a very cohesive, straightforward product that can just really change how the doctors work.”
The soon-to-be-released order entry assistant is expected to extract prescription orders during the visit and prepare them under the right problem in the electronic health record (EHR), Tutera continued.
“It’ll draft all of those fields for you,” he explained. “The net result is 10 clicks gone. I just review what the AI does. And if I agree with it, great, I click send to EHR, and it populates everything, and then I can just sign off on it.”
Without this summer’s $2.5 million seed round, Tutera said, CarePilot probably wouldn’t have been able to release its new products and hire many of the 13 team members it boasts today.
“It’s completely changed the velocity of the company,” he continued. “We were in a pretty good position pre-fundraise like we weren’t about to go out of business. And the decision that we made consciously was ‘Look, this is like a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to really go build something that can materially change how a provider operates in their day.’ Accepting this funding was a way to move faster toward that goal and you need a team to do that.”

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Startup ideas are here, but does Kansas have the risk capital to get them to the next level?
Eight early-stage Kansas entrepreneurs sat across from Midwest-based investors this week at Aspiria NOW in Overland Park, engaging in rapid-fire, “speed dating” style meetings aimed at moving their ventures closer to real investment. “We’re seeing just a great inflow of companies, especially at the early stage, come in just high levels of sophistication and awareness…
‘Buy, buy, buy while we can’: This KC toy store is stockpiling Christmas gifts now as tariff reality unwraps
Brett Goodwin and Alan Tipton are feeling even more thankful right now for the large, dry basement at The Learning Tree — the independent toy store they own in Prairie Village — amid worries over tariffs on Chinese imports and how they’ll impact prices from toy manufacturers. The best they can do to prepare: stockpile…
KC’s pro pickleball team getting new $6.5M home near Arrowhead, Kauffman Stadium
A long-awaited redevelopment project in Kansas City’s stadium corridor is transforming the former CoCo Key Water resort into a vibrant destination pickleball facility with eight indoor courts, a full-service bar and restaurant, a coffee shop, and event spaces. It also will be home to the Kansas City Stingers, a professional team in the National Pickleball…




