• Monday, February 10, 2025
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Funding rebounds as African startups raise $289m in January

Funding rebounds as African startups raise $289m in January

African startups raised $289 million in January 2025, 240 percent more than the figure raised in 2023, marking a promising start to the year.

In January 2023, African startups raised $85 million, making it the second-best January for startup funding since at least 2019, failing behind only January 2022 during the peak of the funding boom, according to Africa: The Big Deal, a funding tracker.

Read also: Investors bet on equity as African startups raise $3.2bn in 2024

It noted, however, that equity financing dominated the fundraising landscape, accounting for over 90 percent of the total amount raised at $262 million, which is a leap from the figure in January 2024. It also marks the second-highest January for equity fundraising in the past six years.

Africa: The Big Deal noted that the four largest deals in January 2025 came from the big four (Nigeria, Kenya, Egypt and South Africa), and they accounted for about 60 percent of the total funding raised across the continent.

The Big Deal said, “PowerGen, an energy-focused startup raised $50m+ to establish a scalable platform for distributed renewable energy solutions across Africa, LemFi (Fintech) secured $53m to further expand into Asia and Europe.

“Naked, an insuretech firm, bagged a $38m Series B to automate and expand its product offering; and Enko Education secured $24m to keep expanding its network of African schools.”

Notably, three of these deals highlight a growing trend of African startups expanding their operations beyond the continent.

Read also: B2B marketing for African startups: Go digital or fall behind

Experts believe that the performance in January 2025 signals a promising wave of funding in Africa’s startup ecosystem, which faced significant funding challenges in 2023 and 2024.

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