Acyl thiourea scaffolds are frequently employed in drug development to discern unique and essential therapies for the eradication of the most challenging diseases. Hence, we developed a library of novel cyclopropyl incorporating acyl thiourea derivatives (4a-j) and evaluated their antimicrobial, alpha-amylase, and proteinase K inhibition potential. Compound (4h) (4-methoxy) demonstrated the strongest alpha-amylase inhibition (IC50 = 1.572 f 0.017 mu M), while compound (4j) (3,4,5-trimethoxy) exhibited potent proteinase K inhibition (IC50 = 1.718 f 0.061 mu M), comparable to the standard acarbose (IC50 = 1.063 f 0.013 mu M) and phenyl methyl sulfonyl fluoride (IC50 = 0.119 f 0.014 mu M). The unsubstituted compound (4a) emerged as the most potent antifungal agent (17 mm zone of inhibition), outperforming the positive control Terbinafine (zone of inhibition 16 mm). These compounds (4a-j) also displayed moderate antibacterial activity. SAR analysis revealed the influences of various substitutions on the acyl thiourea scaffold. Computational studies, including DFT, molecular docking, and ADMET predictions, supported the biological findings and identified these compounds as promising inhibitors of alpha-amylase, proteinase K, and microbial pathogens.