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Dive brief:
- As part of a new strategy to advance the asset management and proptech sector, Autodesk has struck a multibillion-dollar deal to acquire a maintenance and operations company.
- The San Francisco-based tech giant has it entered into a definitive agreement to acquire MaintainXa maintenance and operations platform, for an all-cash deal valued at approximately $3.6 billion, according to a May 28 announcement from the contech firm. It plans to finance the acquisition through a combination of cash on hand and debt financing.
- Autodesk plans to expand into the building operations and maintenance space. MaintainX’s pre-built integration capabilities and scalable go-to-market facets give Autodesk strong potential for expansion, according to the announcement.
Diving knowledge:
Autodesk’s planned acquisition of MaintainX furthers its goal of breaking new ground in the asset management space. On the same day Autodesk announced the deal, CEO Andrew Anagnost announced Autodesk Operations Solutionsa technology division of Autodesk that manages these facilities and structures under one roof, via a blog post.
“Based on our investments in the architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) and design and manufacturing (D&M) industries, we are well-positioned to help our customers manage and optimize everything that happens to their critical systems and assets in real time,” Anagnost wrote.
In the post, Anagnost positioned the asset management viability of the business alongside its other core capabilities. Some of the spooled technologies are Tandem, FlexSim, Fusion Operations and Factory Design Utilities, according to Anagnost’s post.
MaintainX occupies a crucial position in this strategy. Anagnost added that in the age of artificial intelligence, MaintainX captures asset performance and system behavior under real-world conditions.
Indeed, this clean data is important for professionals in the construction space, as experts have maintained AI is only as good as the data it ingests.
“This data provides the context needed to make AI accurate, actionable and valuable,” Anagnost wrote.
This isn’t the first deal Autodesk has landed this year. In another push to improve its data visibility capabilities, the company completed its acquisition of Rhumbixaccording to a March 31 announcement. The startup collected data on timekeeping, labor and payroll functions.
That is, M&A activity began in late 2025and until now in 2026, M&A deals haven’t slowed down. Other tech giants, including Procore and Trimble, along with general contractors such as Chicago-based Bulley & Andrews and Minneapolis-based Mortenson, have made deals to expand their businesses.
