PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2066478
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2066478
According to Mordor Intelligence, the healthcare cybersecurity market size was valued at USD 35.78 billion in 2025 and estimated to grow from USD 42.31 billion in 2026 to reach USD 97.79 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 18.26% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Solution Type (Identity and Access Management, Risk and Compliance Management, and More), Security Type (Network Security, Endpoint Security, and More), Deployment Mode (On-Premises and Cloud), End User (Hospitals and Clinics, and More), Organization Size (Large Enterprises and Small and Medium Enterprises), and by Geography. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Security researchers confirmed that adversaries linked to Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran probed hospital infrastructure daily in 2024, culminating in breaches that touched an estimated 259 million medical records. Health records command a premium on illicit markets because they enable insurance fraud, blackmail, and espionage. This dual utility fuels relentless reconnaissance, ransomware, and supply-chain attacks. Artificial-intelligence tooling now automates spear-phishing and voice deep-fake scams, eroding user-based defenses. Providers respond by prioritizing continuous monitoring, multi-factor authentication, and least-privilege policies across cloud workloads and connected devices in the healthcare cybersecurity market.
Section 524B requires every new medical device submitted to the FDA after March 2023 to include a Software Bill of Materials, secure development attestations, and a plan for coordinated vulnerability disclosure. Beyond pre-market clearance, manufacturers must patch flaws for the product's commercial life. Hospitals integrating these devices, therefore, budget for integrated risk management platforms able to track firmware, security advisories, and patch status in real time. Simultaneously, the HHS Cybersecurity Performance Goals outline baseline safeguards-such as immutable backups and privileged access controls-that many boards treat as de facto standards. Identity, Credential, and Access Management frameworks endorsed by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency replace password-centric models with risk-based, certificate-driven authentication.
Smaller hospitals often run on operating margins below 2%, leaving inadequate reserves for layered security tooling and 24X7 monitoring. Investigations into recent closures show cyber incidents can trigger permanent shutdowns when ransom demands and downtime erode liquidity. The Healthcare Sector Coordinating Council recommends classifying cybersecurity as an allowable Medicare expense, yet reimbursement policy remains under review. Until sustainable funding emerges, adoption of subscription-based managed detection and response services is the primary avenue for risk reduction.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Identity and Access Management tools accounted for 25.80% of the healthcare cybersecurity market size in 2025 as organizations focused on controlling privileged credentials inside sprawling clinical ecosystems. However, demand is shifting toward Security Information and Event Management platforms, which are forecast to grow at 18.72% CAGR to 2031. The change reflects a consensus that continuous log correlation and behavioral analytics offer faster breach containment than perimeter controls alone. Over the forecast period, cybersecurity roadmaps show budget reallocation from stand-alone antivirus toward converged detection stacks that integrate SIEM, SOAR, and user-entity analytics.
Risk and compliance suites remain steady because they streamline documentation for HIPAA, GDPR, and device post-market surveillance audits. Encryption and data-loss-prevention modules gain traction within zero-trust architectures, especially where providers must share radiology images and lab data across multiple cloud tenants. Emerging behavioral analytics solutions built with machine learning sit in the "other solutions" bucket and are frequently piloted in research institutes experimenting with precision medicine workloads.
Network security retained 33.95% of the healthcare cybersecurity market share in 2025 because hospitals continue to segment VLANs connecting operating rooms, pharmaceutical automation, and picture-archiving systems. The pivot to cloud workloads is nonetheless reshaping priorities: cloud security tools are poised for an 18.58% CAGR, propelled by migrations of EHR instances to hyperscale providers.
Endpoint protection confronts proliferating device heterogeneity, from bedside infusion pumps to clinician smartphones. Application security rises as in-house development teams build patient-facing portals that integrate third-party APIs, necessitating runtime protection and software composition analysis. Medical-device and IoMT security, once an afterthought, is now a board-level issue because more than 14,000 healthcare IP addresses expose device telemetry to the public internet-a statistic that rallies funding for agentless network detection and regulated device patch orchestration.
North America maintained 34.12% healthcare cyber security market share in 2025, backed by the world's strictest PHI regulations, a mature insurance system, and high per-capita health IT budgets. Federal funding, including the 2025 civilian cyber allocation, underwrites modernization of electronic health records and cloud adoption. The United States also endured the largest known breach the 2024 Change Healthcare incident affecting 100 million individuals which solidified zero-trust roadmaps and third-party risk audits. Canada's Pan-Canadian Artificial Intelligence Strategy and Mexico's social-security digitization initiatives further enlarge regional demand for SIEM and endpoint detection tools.
Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing territory at 19.12% CAGR in the global healthcare cybersecurity market. National e-health mandates in Japan, South Korea, and India integrate cloud-hosted patient registries with secure identity platforms, spurring local demand for data-masking and encryption-as-a-service offerings. China's Healthy China 2030 blueprint designates cybersecurity one of six enabling pillars for smart hospitals, boosting orders for domestic firewall and vulnerability-management vendors that meet cross-border data flow restrictions. Australia's federal budget anchors subsidies for rural tele-health, leading to a 92% jump in digital-health solicitation requests from 2022-2024.
Europe's privacy-centric regime ensures steady growth as GDPR fines crystallize board-level accountability. Germany allocates EUR 3 billion to hospital digitization with at least 15% reserved for IT security enhancements, stimulating procurement of identity orchestration and secure email gateways. France implements its "MaSante 2025" e-health strategy with a cybersecurity annex that mandates threat-intelligence sharing among regional health agencies. The United Kingdom's NHS "Data Saves Lives" program directs funds to modernize legacy paging and imaging platforms, contingent upon ISO 27001 certification.
The Middle East and Africa exhibit accelerating adoption as Gulf Cooperation Council states build smart-city hospitals and seek compliance with the National Cybersecurity Authority's Healthcare Sector Controls. South Africa and Kenya pilot cloud-based immunization registries accompanied by tokenization schemes that de-identify patient data. South America registers steady expansion led by Brazil's open-health initiatives and Argentina's electronic prescription rollout, both of which require encryption key management and secure API gateways.