
Saudi Arabia’s cybersecurity startup COGNNA has raised a fresh $9.2 million in a Series A funding to accelerate the rollout of its AI-powered security operations center (SOC) across the Middle East and beyond.
The round was led by Saudi investment firm Impact46, co-led by BNVT Capital, and with participation from Vision Ventures and Tali Ventures, which altogether highlights the growing investor confidence in the Kingdom’s emerging cybersecurity ecosystem.
COGNNA As a Young Saudi Player With Global Ambitions
Founded in 2022 by Ibrahim Alshamran and Ziyad Alshehri, COGNNA was built to focus on helping organizations detect and respond to cyberthreats using a blend of artificial intelligence (AI) and human expertise.
The company frames its core offering as “Agentic SOC,” where it offers a new kind of security operations center built to anticipate and act on threats in real-time, as opposed to just reacting after an incident has occurred. As such, COGNNA’s platform targets both large enterprises and small to mid-sized businesses (SMBs), many of which struggle to staff and operate a 24/7 security team in-house.
A very important part of COGNNA’s product offerings is Nexus, an AI-powered security operations center that is designed to pull together telemetry from endpoints, identities, cloud services, and hybrid environments into a single and continuously monitored view.
Nexus layers autonomous detection, investigation, and guided response on top of this data, giving security teams more context and fewer false positives to sift through. According to many of the company’s reports, COGNNA’s Nexus can accelerate threat detection and resolution while cutting the cost of security operations and integrating into enterprise environments in a short time.
How COGNNA Will Use The $9.2 Million Funding
COGNNA plans to channel the new capital into four main areas including the acceleration of product development, sales and marketing, core operations, and team expansion.
On the product side, the focus is on upgrading its agentic AI capabilities and scaling the Nexus platform to handle larger, more complex customer environments globally, which includes more automation across threat triage and incident response, as well as richer predictive modeling to spot potential attacks earlier in the cyber kill chain.
And on the commercial front, COGNNA is looking to consolidate its position in Saudi Arabia and the wider Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region while laying the groundwork for international expansion. This means building a stronger go-to-market system, investing in ecosystems, and growing a team that can support customers across time zones and regulatory standards, with the ultimate aim of upgrading its infrastructure so it can safely and reliably serve more customers in more markets without compromising on performance or resilience.
Additionally, COGNNA’s broader vision is to turn the SOC from a noisy, reactive function into an intelligent system that can shoulder more of the heavy lifting on its own. In practice, that means combining autonomous detection and analysis with an AI assistant that can surface insights, suggest next steps, and help security teams make decisions faster.
“Our mission has always been to transform cybersecurity from reactive defense to intelligent prevention,” said Ziyad AlSheri, CTO of COGNNA. “Through our AI-led platform, we’re building an Agentic SOC that doesn’t just respond to threats, it anticipates them. This funding allows us to accelerate our R&D in AI and automation, scale globally, and continue delivering security that learns, adapts, and protects in real time.”
Why This Funding Matters For AI-powered Cybersecurity
The timing of this funding taps into two converging trends including rising cyber risk in the Middle East region and a global push toward AI-driven security automation. Saudi Arabia has been investing heavily in digital infrastructure and cloud, but that also widens the attack surface for both public and private organizations.
As such, COGNNA is pitching itself as one of the homegrown answers to fix the problem, as it promises to offer a platform that can survive regional regulations and one that is designed for linguistic and threat-pattern realities while still aiming for global standards. For instance, an AI-powered SOC that blends automation with expert oversight can be more attainable than building a 24/7 in-house team from scratch for customers that struggle to hire and retain cybersecurity talent in the region.
However, what remains to be seen is whether platforms like COGNNA that have secured massive funding can successfully convert this raise into measurable improvements in detection speed, analyst productivity, and resilience for customers operating in increasingly complex threats environments.
