Aya Raises $7 Million Series A to Scale On-Demand Fashion
Saudi-based fashion startup Aya has raised a $7 million Series A to scale its on-demand production model across MENA. The round was led by RAED Ventures with participation from Sanabil Investments, Nuwa Capital, Joa Capital, and Khwarizmi Ventures.
The Round Aya , a Saudi-based fashion startup, has closed a $7 million Series A round as it looks to scale its on-demand production model, according to a report by Wamda on April 16, 2026. The round was led by RAED Ventures , with participation from Nuwa Capital, Sanabil Investments (a subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund), Joa Capital, and Khwarizmi Ventures. On-Demand Fashion in MENA Aya's model focuses on producing fashion items only after orders are placed, aiming to cut inventory waste and align supply with real demand. The approach sits alongside a wider industry push toward more sustainable and responsive retail supply chains. The new capital will reportedly fund geographic expansion, supply chain upgrades, and technology investments that sharpen the on-demand production flow. Demand in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and other Gulf markets has been a key driver behind the company's growth. A Strong Backer Lineup The investor list is notable. Sanabil Investments is a wholly owned subsidiary of Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, giving Aya institutional backing alongside regional venture firms. RAED Ventures, Nuwa Capital, Joa Capital, and Khwarizmi Ventures all bring deep MENA startup experience. Together, the investors signal confidence in both Aya's execution and in the on-demand fashion thesis as a whole. Retail startups in MENA have long struggled with inventory-heavy business models that do not travel well across fragmented markets. An on-demand approach, if it can be made economical at scale, addresses that problem and matches the sustainability expectations of younger consumers. With $7 million in fresh capital and a blue-chip backer list, Aya now has to show that the model can scale across more countries and product categories without losing its unit economics.