Top 10: Healthcare Supply Chain Consulting firms in 2026

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Supply Chain Digital takes a look at the Top 10 healthcare supply chain consulting firms
As demand volatility and margin pressures force healthcare supply chains to adopt, leading consulting firms are applying AI to deliver measurable impact

Healthcare supply chains have moved from operational support functions to strategic priorities.

Demand volatility, biologics complexity, regulatory scrutiny, and margin pressures are forcing life sciences companies and providers to rethink how they forecast, source and distribute products.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is now embedded in healthcare supply chain transformation not as experimentation, but as core infrastructure.

The firms below are helping organisations modernise healthcare supply chains with AI, predictive analytics and decision intelligence, delivering measurable impact across procurement, planning, manufacturing and distribution networks.

Accenture

Founded: 1989
Headquarters: Dublin, Ireland
Employees: ~742,000
Revenue (FY2024): ~US$64.9bn

Accenture offers end-to-end visibility (Credit: Accenture)

Accenture continues to set the pace in AI-enabled healthcare supply chain modernisation. Its digital control towers, AI-driven demand sensing and supply network digital twins are deployed across global pharma and MedTech ecosystems. The firm integrates procurement, production and distribution data to create end-to-end visibility and resilience on a scale.

Deloitte

Founded: 1845
Headquarters: London, UK
Employees: ~457,000
Revenue (FY2024): ~US$67.2bn

Deloitte focuses on risk modelling and resilience (Credit: Deloitte)

Deloitte’s healthcare supply chain practice centers on resilience, risk modeling, and advanced planning transformation. Its AI solutions enhance supplier risk visibility, optimise inventory buffers, and improve demand predictability. Particularly in regulated life sciences environments, Deloitte supports the shift from reactive logistics management to predictive, insight-led supply network management.

ZS 

Founded: 1983
Headquarters: Evanston, Illinois, US
Employees: ~13,000
Estimated revenue (FY2025): ~US$2bn

ZS integrates predictive intelligence into its planning (Credit: ZS)

ZS supports AI-enabled healthcare supply chain consulting & transformation through advanced planning, predictive analytics and demand sensing models. The firm helps life sciences and healthcare organisations improve forecast accuracy, anticipate disruptions and optimise supply networks through connected data and AI-driven insights.

By integrating predictive intelligence, automation and decision analytics into supply chain planning, ZS enables organisations to enhance resilience, improve service levels and respond more effectively to market volatility

McKinsey & Company

Founded: 1926
Headquarters: New York, US
Employees: ~38,000
Revenue (2023): ~US$16bn

McKinsey embeds operational optimisation (Credit: McKinsey)

McKinsey integrates advanced analytics with end-to-end supply chain redesign. In healthcare, its AI-driven demand forecasting and manufacturing performance programs address service volatility and capacity constraints. The firm often embeds operational optimisation within broader enterprise transformation initiatives, aligning operational resilience with long-term strategic growth.

Boston Consulting Group

Founded: 1963
Headquarters: Boston, Massachusetts, US
Employees: ~36,000
Revenue (2024): ~US$13.5bn

Boston Consulting Group AI-enabled planning towers (Credit: BCG)

BCG approaches healthcare supply chain transformation through value creation and agility. Its AI-enabled planning towers and supplier collaboration platforms improve forecast accuracy and working capital efficiency. The firm links supply chain responsiveness directly to patient access and commercial performance.

PwC

Founded: 1849
Headquarters: London, UK
Employees: ~327,000
Revenue (FY2024): ~US$55.2bn

PWC focuses on supply chain modernisation (Credit: PWC)

PwC emphasises governance-led supply chain modernisation. Through predictive analytics and AI-powered procurement intelligence, it strengthens supplier oversight and demand visibility. In healthcare settings where compliance and cost discipline are paramount, PwC balances regulatory alignment with operational efficiency.

EY

Founded: 1989 (from merger)
Headquarters: London, UK
Employees: ~312,000
Revenue (FY2024): ~US$45.4bn

EY focuses on traceability (Credit: EY)

EY supports healthcare supply chain digitisation through integrated business planning and AI-enabled inventory optimisation. Its work often centers on traceability, cold chain monitoring and regulatory transparency. The firm combines technology deployment with operational redesign to strengthen supply continuity.

Bain & Company

Founded: 1973
Headquarters: Boston, Massachusetts, US
Employees: ~22,000
Revenue (FY2025): ~US$7bn

Bain uses demand forecasting (Credit: Bain)

Bain & Company excels in AI-powered supply chain transformations, particularly in healthcare life sciences, where it deploys predictive analytics for demand forecasting, inventory optimisation and regulatory compliance automation. 

KPMG

Founded: 1987 (from merger)
Headquarters: Amstelveen, Netherlands
Employees: ~265,000
Revenue (FY2024): ~US$35.6bn

KPMG uses supplier analytics tools (Credit: KPMG)

KPMG’s healthcare supply chain work is anchored in governance, risk intelligence and digital enablement. Its AI forecasting models and supplier analytics tools enhance procurement resilience and cost control. The firm aligns operational performance improvements with regulatory accountability.

Oliver Wyman

Founded: 1984
Headquarters: New York, NY, US
Employees: ~9,000
Revenue 2025: ~$2.5bn

Oliver Wyman has a focus on risk mitigation (Credit: Oliver Wyman)

Oliver Wyman strengthens healthcare supply chain resilience through its Quotient AI entity, focusing on risk mitigation, digital twins and predictive modeling for disruptions such as vaccine distribution and cold chain logistics. The firm applies AI-powered platforms for geospatial risk assessment, cyber threat monitoring and integrated supply chain management.

Final perspective

Healthcare supply chains are evolving into intelligent, connected networks powered by data, AI and analytics. As organisations face growing demand volatility, regulatory complexity and global disruptions, supply chain intelligence is becoming a critical capability for improving resilience, visibility and operational performance.