Med-tech M&A activity cooled in 2025, with total reported deal value falling to about $42.14 billion, down from $57.9 billion in 2024 and far below the levels seen in 2021 and 2022, when annual totals exceeded $150 billion.
Med-tech dealmaking totaled $1.72 billion through the first three quarters of 2025, signaling a potential rebound in the works from the subdued activity seen in 2024, when publicly reported full-year deal value reached $2.12 billion. Q3 was the strongest quarter so far this year, contributing $1.37 billion, nearly 80% of the year-to-date total, following slower starts of $149.1 million in Q1 and $192.2 million in Q2.
Solventum Corp. continued its restructuring with a second significant acquisition this year, the proposed purchase of privately held Acera Surgical Inc. for $725 million in cash plus up to $125 in contingent cash payments based on achievement of specified milestones. St. Louis.-based Acera projected that its synthetic wound care products will bring in $90 million in sales this year.
Med-tech M&A activity totaled $4.84 billion in September, down slightly from $7.29 billion in July but stronger than August’s $2.42 billion. Year-to-date disclosed deal value reached $37.21 billion, roughly on par with the $41.79 billion recorded during the same period in 2024. While still far below the highs of 2021 and 2022, when annual totals surpassed $100 billion, the 2025 data show that consolidation within the med-tech sector remains steady.
The trend of corporate pruning in med tech continues with Solventum Corp.’s decision to sell its purification and filtration business to Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. for $4.1 billion. The announcement follows two other big company splits already in 2025: Baxter International Inc.’s separation of its kidney unit as Vantive, bought by Carlyle Group Inc. for $3.8 billion, and Stryker Corp.’s planned sale of its spinal implants business to Viscogliosi Brothers LLC.
Smart Reporting GmbH raised €23 million (US$24.5 million) in a series C funding round for its medical reporting software which automates and streamlines physicians’ workload. The funding is a “significant accelerator” for the company, “catalyzing business growth, product development, and expansion into international markets,” Wieland Sommer, founder and co-CEO of Smart Reporting told BioWorld.