Armis just locked in $435M in pre-IPO fuel at a $6.1B valuation, led by Goldman Sachs Alternatives Growth Equity with CapitalG, Evolution Equity Partners, and an all-star lineup of existing investors doubling down. This isn’t your typical cybersecurity raise, it’s a statement. You don’t pull that kind of capital unless you’re rewriting how the world handles digital exposure. It’s not luck. It’s precision.
Founded in 2015 by Yevgeny Dibrov (CEO) and Nadir Izrael (CTO), both Technion grads, both veterans of Israel’s elite Unit 8200, Armis didn’t stumble into success; they engineered it. Dibrov learned scale at Adallom before its $320M sale to Microsoft. Izrael built Google’s autocomplete and learned how data thinks before it’s even typed. Together, they turned Armis into the quiet force watching over the connected world, from the boardroom to the boiler room.
Headquartered in San Francisco with global hubs from Tel Aviv to London, Armis has become the unseen muscle behind modern security. Its Armis Centrix platform doesn’t just detect, it predicts. It watches every IT, IoT, OT, and cloud asset, 500M+ devices and counting, through an AI-driven engine that knows the difference between a vulnerability and a crisis waiting to happen. Agentless. Effortless. Fearless.
In the past 18 months, Armis doubled ARR to $300M, serving 40% of the Fortune 100 and 60% of the Fortune 10. United Airlines, Colgate-Palmolive, Mondelez, Reckitt, and Oracle already trust them to keep the lights on and the hackers out. The next milestone: $500M ARR pre-IPO, $1B long term. CFO Jonathan Carr, with IPO-seasoned chops from Atlassian and SurveyMonkey, is running a tight ship. President Alex Mosher drives unified global growth. CMO Conor Coughlan turns technical depth into market gravity.
The $435M raise isn’t just capital, it’s jet fuel for expansion. New offices in Munich, London, Bucharest, and NYC signal the scale-up phase. The March 2025 acquisition of Otorio for $120M brought serious OT/CPS firepower, giving Armis control in air-gapped, industrial, and critical infrastructure environments. When you’re securing hospitals, airports, and city grids, “mission critical” isn’t a buzzword, it’s Tuesday.
Armis is already running with public-company discipline, hitting targets like it’s IPO rehearsal. This round accelerates product innovation, global reach, and the march toward public debut in late 2026 or early 2027. Dibrov and Izrael aren’t chasing hype, they’re building a legacy company for the long haul.

