Fascano: Oman's Restaurant SaaS That Just Raised $10M
Founded in Muscat in 2021, Fascano has built a cloud platform powering 2,000+ restaurants and cafés across 6 countries and processing 70 million orders. Its $10 million April 2026 round, backed by the Oman Investment Authority, marks its third funding milestone and signals a major push into the wider MENA market.
In Muscat's fast-growing hospitality sector, a quiet revolution has been underway since 2021. Fascano, an Omani cloud platform built for restaurants, cafés, and hotels, closed a $10 million third funding round in April 2026, backed by the Oman Investment Authority. It is now one of the most well-funded hospitality tech startups to emerge from the Gulf outside Saudi Arabia.
Key Takeaways
- Founded in Muscat in 2021 by Ahmed Al Kharusi and Murak Al Muairki
- All-in-one cloud suite covering POS, ordering, kitchen display, loyalty, and analytics
- 2,000+ customers across 6+ countries with 70 million orders processed
- Commission-free direct ordering is the core USP against delivery aggregators
- Three funding rounds totalling $11M+, with OIA's Future Fund backing two consecutive rounds
- CEO positions Oman as the permanent innovation hub for regional expansion, not a stepping stone
🍽️ What Fascano Does (In Plain English)
Running a restaurant is harder than it looks. Most operators juggle five or six disconnected tools: one for ordering, another for inventory, a third for loyalty cards, and a separate system for the kitchen. Fascano replaces that patchwork with a single cloud platform, built from the ground up for MENA operators.
The company's tagline says it plainly: Fast. Scan. Order. Diners scan a QR code, browse a digital menu, and pay without waiting for a waiter. Behind the scenes, the restaurant gets a real-time view of every order, every inventory item, and every branch, all in one dashboard.
The platform covers:
- Point of Sale (POS) for dine-in and counter service
- Multi-channel online ordering via QR codes, web storefronts, and delivery platform integrations
- Kitchen Display System (KDS) to coordinate back-of-house operations in real time
- Real-time inventory tracking with automated cost analysis
- CRM and loyalty programs so restaurants own their customer data directly, without a third-party middleman
- Analytics dashboards for branch-by-branch performance comparison
- Secure payment processing with local payment gateway integrations across MENA
Target customers span the full hospitality spectrum: full-service restaurants, cafés, food trucks, food courts, hotels, cinemas, event venues, and kiosks. Offline functionality is built in, which matters in areas with unreliable connectivity.
🏆 How Fascano Stacks Up Against Regional Competitors
The MENA hospitality tech market is not empty. Saudi Arabia's Foodics serves more than 22,000 restaurants across 17 countries. Dubai-based Syrve MENA claims 45,000+ F&B clients worldwide. Both have significant head starts in terms of customer count and geographic breadth. So where does Fascano fit?
| Feature | Fascano | Foodics | Syrve MENA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commission-free direct ordering | Yes | Limited | Limited |
| Built for MENA market realities | Yes | Yes (SA-centric) | Partial |
| Arabic interface and local payment gateways | Yes | Yes | Partial |
| Offline functionality | Yes | Limited | Yes |
| Strong Oman-local support and focus | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
The sharpest edge is the commission-free ordering model. Delivery aggregators like Talabat and Careem charge restaurants a cut of every order, typically between 15% and 30%. Fascano's direct-ordering channels let restaurants own their customer relationships and retain more revenue per transaction. As CEO Al Kharusi described the philosophy, the goal was to build "a platform that reflects the realities of our market: deeply integrated tools that work together as one ecosystem, with pricing that is accessible for small and mid-sized businesses."
📅 The Journey: From a Muscat Startup to a MENA Contender
Ahmed Al Kharusi and Murak Al Muairki co-founded Fascano in 2021. The timing was deliberate. The global hospitality industry had just been forced to accelerate contactless payments and QR-code menus out of pandemic-era necessity, and MENA operators were actively looking for tools built for their specific context, not adapted from US or European markets.
The founders spent their earliest years building a deep understanding of Omani operator pain points before expanding. That disciplined focus paid off: by November 2024, the Oman Future Fund, backed by the Oman Investment Authority, led a second undisclosed round, signalling institutional confidence in Fascano's retention metrics and product quality.
By April 2026, Fascano had surpassed 70 million orders processed across 2,000+ customers in six countries. Its third and largest round, a $10 million close, brought in Cyfr Capital and HH Sayyid Dr. Kamil bin Fahd Al Said alongside continued OIA support, as Oman Observer reported. A parallel report from Arab Founders described the platform as "designed to eliminate operational friction" for hospitality businesses across MENA.
The 12-to-18-month plan, according to Al Kharusi, prioritises deepening the vendor base in existing markets before entering new regional territories with strong digital demand.
💰 Funding Timeline
| Round | Date | Amount | Key Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seed | 2021-2022 | $1M+ | Undisclosed |
| Round 2 | November 2024 | Undisclosed | Oman Future Fund (OIA), Cyfr Capital |
| Round 3 | April 2026 | $10 million | Cyfr Capital, Sayyid Dr. Kamil bin Fahd Al Said, Oman Future Fund (OIA) |
"Oman is and will remain central to Fascano: not only as our home market but as a credible launchpad for the region."
- Ahmed Al Kharusi, CEO and Co-founder, Fascano
🔗 Find Fascano Online
- Website: fascano.com
- Company LinkedIn: Fascano on LinkedIn
- CEO and Co-founder: Ahmed Al Kharusi on LinkedIn
- Co-founder: Murak Al Muairki on LinkedIn
Note: Fascano does not publicly list pricing tiers. Businesses are directed to book a demo for a custom quote. Team headcount and exact tech stack details are not publicly disclosed as of June 2026.
🇴🇲 Why This Matters for Oman
Fascano's story illustrates three things Oman's startup ecosystem is getting right.
First, sovereign capital is now playing a genuine multi-stage role. The Oman Investment Authority's Future Fund has backed Fascano across at least two consecutive rounds, demonstrating patience and conviction rather than a one-time seed cheque. That kind of institutional depth is what Vision 2040's private-sector development agenda is designed to create.
Second, Fascano is building in Oman and expanding outward. Many regional tech startups treat Muscat as a proof-of-concept stop before relocating to Dubai or Riyadh. Al Kharusi is explicit about rejecting that path: Oman remains the central hub for innovation, operations, and talent. That commitment matters for the local ecosystem because every hire Fascano makes, and every supplier it works with, stays in Oman.
Third, the hospitality sector is a direct Vision 2040 priority. Oman's tourism diversification targets are ambitious, and technology that helps hotels and restaurants operate efficiently underpins the whole strategy. Government programs like the Sas for Excellence initiative, which channels RO 1 million into Omani tech firms, exist precisely to back companies at earlier stages of exactly this kind of trajectory.
For founders watching from the sidelines, Fascano is a useful proof of concept: an operational software problem that most people overlook, solved locally, scaled regionally, and now funded by some of the Gulf's most credible institutions.