Five Nigerian Startups Quietly Building the Future
When the startup ecosystem is often discussed in Nigeria, it's usually the big ones that are often mentioned and the growing ones are not given the accolades they deserve and spotlights for the problems they are trying to solve.
Beyond the unicorn dream, the shutdown of headlines with fundings, partnership and rebranding—these startups are doing something really important: solving real time problems, adapting to harsh realities, and building quietly with intention.
These is not hype tales or glossy pitch-deck fantasies. It’s about five Nigerian startups that reflect where the ecosystem is today, pragmatic, experimental, and deeply local in their understanding of the market.
From artificial intelligence to electric vehicles, creator economy to mass transit, these startups show that Nigerian tech is not one thing; it is an ecosystem of many things evolving at once.
1. Kros AI
Kros AI is a Nigerian artificial intelligence startup reimagining how businesses interact with customers, not through the Internet, but through something everyone already understands and uses, which is a phone call.
The startup allows businesses to connect local phone numbers to AI-powered agents that can handle customer support, fintech interactions, and basic automation. Instead of forcing users to download new apps or learn new systems, Kros AI meets people where they already are. A call goes in, an intelligent response comes back.
This approach is particularly powerful in a market like Nigeria, where phone calls remain a primary communication tool for the average person.
It’s a reminder that innovation doesn’t always mean reinventing new patterns, sometimes it is about upgrading what is already existing?
2. MAX
MAX’s story is one of survival through reinvention.
They started as a motorcycle-based delivery and logistics company and later evolved into ride-hailing, only to face an existential threat when Lagos banned commercial motorcycles.
For many startups, that policy shift would have been fatal, for MAX, it became a turning point.
The company pivoted aggressively into electric vehicles, repositioning itself as an EV and mobility infrastructure startup. Today, MAX operates with an overall market value reportedly around $87 million, has raised about $24 million in a mix of debt and equity, and runs an EV assembly facility in Ibadan, Nigeria.
The journey hasn’t been smooth, layoffs, restructuring, and strategic resets were part of the process. But MAX’s ability to adapt reflects a core strength about Nigerian startups and that is adapting to new realities in the form of policies and governmental regulations.
3. Raba
Raba is tackling a less glamorous but deeply critical problem, access to business equipment.
Across Africa, many small and medium-sized businesses fail not because of bad ideas, but because they can’t afford the tools they need to grow.
Raba’s lease-to-own model allows businesses to access essential infrastructure, from machinery to equipment, while paying in flexible installments over time.
Instead of demanding full ownership upfront, Raba bridges the gap between access and ownership.
Businesses get what they need to operate and scale, while spreading costs in a way that aligns with cash flow. It’s a model built for reality, not theory, and it reflects a growing shift toward financing structures that understand how African businesses actually grow.
Clapmi
Clapmi is described by its co-founder and CEO as “the Twitch of Africa with a twist,” but that description only tells half the story.
The platform is building a live-streaming ecosystem where both creators and fans can earn.
Clapmi is trying to address a long-standing imbalance where African creators generate value but earn far less than their global counterparts.
With a well-structured live-streaming platform and a focus on monetisation equity, Clapmi secured a $20,000 Lisk's grant to help expand Africa’s competitive livestream economy.
Since its inception in August 2025, ClapMi has hosted more than 150 livestreams and attracted over 6,000+ active users across Africa and the diaspora.
The startup’s ambition is clear: African creators should have the opportunity to earn like global peers.
Shuttlers
Shuttlers is a startup solving a problem every Nigerian commuter understands too well: transportation stress.
The startup operates a tech-enabled, scheduled bus-sharing platform that allows users to find, book, and share comfortable bus rides to work and back home.
Beyond individual commuters, Shuttlers also serves organizations, schools, and institutions with employee transport, daily shuttles, and school pick-up and drop-off services.
By focusing on reliability, comfort, and affordability, Shuttlers offers an alternative to chaotic commuting systems. It’s mass transit, but designed with technology, structure, and ease as its ideology.
Conclusion
These startups don’t share the same sector, business model, or growth trajectory and that’s the point.
Nigeria’s startup ecosystem is no longer a single story about fintech or funding rounds. It’s a layered landscape of adaptation, quiet problem-solving, and long-term thinking.
What unites Kros AI, MAX, Raba, Clapmi, and Shuttlers is not hype, but their genuine intent to solve problems.
They are building for the Nigeria that exists, not the one imagined in pitch decks. They are offering a clearer picture of what sustainable innovation in Nigeria actually looks like: local understanding, strategic flexibility, and the courage to keep building when the spotlight moves elsewhere.
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