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Medical AI startup Freed reaches 20K users saving 2-3 hours daily
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Freed AI, a San Francisco-based medical transcription startup, has reached 20,000 paying clinician users who are each saving 2-3 hours daily on documentation tasks. The milestone comes as intensifying competition emerges in the AI medical scribe market, with Doximity, a publicly traded physician networking company, launching a free competing product and other well-funded rivals entering the space.

What you should know: Freed’s AI-powered medical scribe automatically transcribes doctor-patient conversations and generates clinical notes tailored to each physician’s workflow preferences.

  • The platform processes nearly 3 million patient visits per month across more than 1,000 small healthcare organizations.
  • Co-founded in 2022 by former Facebook engineers Erez Druk and Andrey Bannikov, the company recently raised $30 million in Series A funding led by Sequoia Capital.
  • Freed has surpassed $20 million in annual recurring revenue as of April 2025.

Rising competition: The AI medical scribe market is rapidly commoditizing as new players enter with aggressive pricing strategies.

  • Doximity launched a free ambient AI scribe available to all verified U.S. physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and medical students.
  • “We want to provide free access to tools our customers have asked for,” Doximity’s chief physician experience officer Amit Phull told Axios.
  • Other competitors have secured funding rounds in the tens or hundreds of millions, though many still need to prove value beyond basic note creation.

How it works: Freed’s system goes beyond simple transcription by using a modular AI pipeline specifically designed for medical documentation.

  • Initial transcription uses a fine-tuned version of OpenAI’s open-source Whisper model optimized for clinical vocabulary.
  • The platform layers hundreds of targeted AI tasks to extract structure, filter out small talk, and match user-specific templates.
  • More than 20 in-house clinicians regularly audit anonymized notes to improve model performance, and the system learns from clinician edits over time.

Pricing and accessibility: Freed offers straightforward subscription pricing designed for small practices rather than large hospital systems.

  • Individual clinicians pay $90/month, while teams of 2-9 users pay $84/month per user.
  • Custom pricing is available for organizations with 10+ seats, and 50% discounts are offered to students, residents, and trainees.
  • The platform maintains HIPAA, HITECH, and SOC 2 compliance with encrypted audio recordings that are deleted by default.

Why this matters: The success addresses a critical pain point in healthcare where physicians spend more than 11 hours weekly on documentation tasks.

  • “Clinicians spend more than 11 hours a week on documentation,” Druk noted. “We built Freed to reduce that burden by listening to the visit and writing the clinical note.”
  • Freed focuses on the “long tail” of healthcare—the 40% of clinicians in private practice who lack multimillion-dollar IT budgets but need documentation help most.

What they’re saying: User feedback highlights the profound personal impact of reducing documentation burden.

  • “For seven years, every day I heard at home, ‘I have notes to do’ — more than I heard ‘I love you’ from my wife,” Druk said about his inspiration for starting the company.
  • One physician told Druk she had been preparing to shut down her private practice after 10 years until she tried Freed and changed her mind.
  • Another clinician said, “I’ve been practicing for 44 years — why didn’t you build this 30 years ago? I can enjoy my practice again.”

Looking ahead: Freed is developing benchmarking systems and enhanced EHR integration to differentiate itself in an increasingly crowded market.

  • The company is creating an internal benchmarking system to measure note quality across 30 distinct criteria, with goals of establishing industry-wide comparison standards.
  • “There are 100 AI scribes out there. From the outside, they look the same,” Druk acknowledged. “We want to help the market measure what actually matters.”
  • Upcoming releases will include more automation around inputting notes into common EHR systems beyond the recently launched Chrome extension.
Freed says 20,000 clinicians are using its medical AI transcription ‘scribe,’ but competition is rising fast

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