January 26, 2026 landed like a quiet alarm bell across commercial real estate. Not a siren. A signal. Visitt, headquartered in New York City with roots in Tel Aviv, locked in $22M in Series B funding led by Susquehanna Growth Equity, with Vertex Ventures Israel, Anfield Capital, Sarona Ventures, Fresh Fund VC, Tal Ventures, Jamie Handwerker, and Mike Fascitelli staying in the deal. This was not capital chasing hype. This was capital doubling down on operations, the layer where buildings either work or bleed.
Visitt did not show up promising miracles. It showed up inside buildings, built shoulder to shoulder with property teams across office, industrial, multifamily, retail, data center, and mixed-use portfolios. Not slide decks. Live workflows. The result is an AI native property operations system designed to replace legacy sprawl with intelligence embedded directly into daily work, not sprinkled on top and renamed innovation.
The growth speaks plainly. In 2025, Visitt delivered more than 900% growth in managed square footage and now supports over 150 customers managing 10,000 plus properties across 310 cities globally. This is scale earned one work order, inspection, compliance task, and tenant interaction at a time. At Epic Investment Services, 12M sq. ft. across 170 buildings went live in 60 days. That is execution.
The company was co-founded by Itay Oren, Idan Wender, Jonathan Kroll, and Ron Heiblum. Itay Oren leads as CEO with operator instinct shaped by real facilities. Idan Wender built the AI backbone. Jonathan Kroll shaped the product around how work actually feels on the ground. Together they designed a system that learns from millions of operational data points and feeds intelligence back into the workflow.
Susquehanna Growth Equity did not wander into this round. Managing Director Josh Elser, alongside Amir Goldman and Tobias Lange, brings pattern recognition from platforms like Real Capital Analytics and Buildout. They know what survives Monday mornings. This funding accelerates AI agents, customer success, and portfolio-level intelligence.
Visitt is not trying to sound futuristic. It is trying to be useful. In a market where operators are under pressure to do more with fewer hands, the question is no longer whether AI belongs in property operations. It is who built it there first, and who is ready to run it at scale.