African Startups raised $3.8 billion in 2025, up 32% from 2024, according to Briter Intelligence, though the funding recovery reached only a narrow part of the tech sector.
Four countries absorbed 84% of all funding, with South Africa and Kenya alone accounting for more than half. Egypt followed. Nigeria slipped to 8%, its lowest share since 2019, after years as the top destination for large funding rounds.
However, Nigeria still closed more deals than any other country.
That contrast runs through Briter’s findings as deal volume stayed high, but cheque sizes grew larger and fewer. African startups are still forming and raising capital, but in 2025, funding became harder to access.
Fintech and climate-focused businesses received most of the funding by value, driven by large, capital-heavy deals. Agriculture, health, education and AI startups accounted for most transactions, keeping innovation spread wide even as funding clustered at the top.
How companies raised money also changed. Debt financing crossed $1 billion for the first time, overtaking equity as scaled startups leaned on loans, structured facilities and other non-dilutive instruments to grow.
Revenue strength, assets and predictability are now more important than rapid expansion.
Exit activity hit a record. Sixty-three acquisitions were announced in 2025, the highest ever recorded. More than half involved startups being bought by corporates, not other startups or private equity firms. Few disclosed prices, but the volume alone shows a market where buying has become easier than building.
Foreign investors still dominate African venture funding, led by the United States and Europe. Briter, however, notes a gradual widening of the pool, with more inflows from Asia and the Gulf, alongside a stronger base of Africa-focused investors providing steadier capital.
The bigger picture is restraint, not retreat. Dario Giuliani, founder and managing director at Briter, said Africa’s investment landscape continues to move through cycles of expansion and preservation, with the current phase firmly in the latter.
“Capital is more selective, risk appetite more measured, and growth expectations more realistic,” he noted. “Yet beneath this restraint, company formation remains active across the continent, even as a handful of ecosystems continue to dominate and true geographic diversification remains limited.”
In short, funding has returned but access has not. Africa’s tech sector is still moving forward, just with fewer passengers in first class.


