Google Is Betting on Nigerian Startups Again, And That Bet Keeps Paying Off
Four Nigerian startups just made it into one of the most competitive tech programs on the continent.
Out of nearly 2,600 applications from across Africa, only 15 companies earned a spot in the 10th cohort of the Google for Startups Accelerator Africa, and Nigeria claimed four of those seats.
The acceptance rate was under 1%. That is not luck.
Who Made the Cut
The four Nigerian companies selected include Bani, MasteryHive AI, Regxta and Termii. They are all building with artificial intelligence at their core, and every single one of them is targeting a structural problem that Africans deal with daily.
Bani is going after one of the most frustrating realities for African businesses scaling their operations across borders. That delay between making a payment and actually receiving it is what Bani is building an infrastructure to fix.
Cross-border settlement in Africa is notoriously slow and unpredictable and Bani decided it is time for a shift.
MasteryHive AI is targeting the backend of financial institutions, specifically the labour-intensive work of transaction reconciliation, fraud detection and anti-money laundering monitoring.
It is the kind of work that currently requires large compliance teams and can still produce errors. MasteryHive AI is automating it.
Regxta is solving a credit access problem. Traditional banks and lenders in Nigeria and across Africa rely on credit histories that most ordinary people and micro-businesses simply do not have.
Regxta uses alternative data to assess creditworthiness and pairs it with a hybrid digital-agent model that actually reaches people in the communities where they live and work.
Termii is perhaps the most invisibly essential of the four. If you have ever received a bank OTP, a payment confirmation or a fraud alert on your phone, that message traveled through some form of communications infrastructure.
Termii is building AI-powered infrastructure that ensures those critical financial messages actually get delivered reliably, every time.
Nigeria's tech community has long debated whether local startups are getting enough international recognition for the depth of what they are building.
Four out of fifteen slots in a pan-African cohort, making Nigeria the most represented country, is part of the answer.
What the Program Actually Offers
The Google for Startups Accelerator Africa is a three-month hybrid program, running from April 13 to June 19, 2026.
The 15 selected startups receive hands-on mentorship from industry experts, technical workshops focused on machine learning and AI and access to Google's global network.
Crucially, the program is entirely equity-free. Google does not take a stake. Founders leave with resources, skills and connections, without giving away a piece of their company to get them.
That equity-free structure is significant for startups at the Series A stage, which is roughly where these companies sit.
At that point, protecting ownership while accessing elite-level technical support is exactly what a scaling startup needs and this program delivers both.
Eight Years, Real Numbers
Google launched this accelerator in 2018. Since then, it has supported 106 startups across 17 African countries.
Those alumni have collectively raised over $263 million and created more than 2,800 jobs. That is a track record.
Nigeria has consistently had representation in these cohorts. The 2025 Class 9 included six Nigerian startups: E-doc Online, GoNomad, Midddleman, Myltura, Pastel, and Scandium.
The year before that, other Nigerian companies came through. The continuity matters and it means Google's assessors are repeatedly looking at Nigeria's ecosystem and finding companies worth backing.
This year's cohort also reflects a deliberate shift in the program's focus. Earlier cohorts emphasized broad digital transformation.
Class 10 has narrowed its lens to deep-tech and AI-native solutions where companies that are not just using technology but building the underlying infrastructure that other services will run on top of.
All four Nigerian selections fit the requirements perfectly.
What This Means for the Ecosystem
Africa's venture funding reached $3.9 billion in 2025.
However, Google's point is that money alone cannot scale a deep-tech startup. You also need specialized technical infrastructure, cloud capabilities and mentorship from people who have built at this level before.
The accelerator is designed to fill those gaps.
For the young generation of Nigerian tech builders watching from university labs, co-working spaces and home offices, the signal here is straightforward.
The problems Nigeria faces are large enough, and complex enough, that the world's biggest technology companies are actively looking for Nigerian founders to solve them.
Bani, MasteryHive AI, Regxta, and Termii did not wait to be discovered. They built something worth finding.
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