Nigerian Startups Face Funding Chill: $343M Raised Amid 16.3% Decline!

While 2025 proved to be a significant year for venture funding across African startups, recording a total of $3.2 billion, the landscape varied greatly among the continent's key players. This figure represents a substantial increase from the $2.2 billion raised in 2024, yet not all regions experienced proportional growth. Notably, Nigeria, a traditional leader in the African startup ecosystem, faced a challenging year, experiencing a decline in funding compared to its counterparts among the 'Continental Big 4'.
Nigerian startups collectively raised $343 million in 2025, a decrease of 16.3% from the $410 million secured in 2024. This performance meant Nigeria contributed only 10.7% of the total continental funding, a sharp drop from its 18.6% share in the previous year. This marked its lowest contribution since 2019 and made it the sole country among the Big 4 (Nigeria, Egypt, Kenya, and South Africa) to witness a drop in funding year-on-year. Equity funding, which constituted 83% of Nigeria’s total, also saw a 22% year-over-year decline. Despite a 14% drop in the number of ventures raising $100,000 or more, Nigeria still led this category with 86 such startups, indicating continued investor interest in its early-stage ecosystem.
In stark contrast, Kenya emerged as Africa's top startup funding destination for the third consecutive year, experiencing massive growth. Startups in the East African nation raised an impressive $984 million, a 54.2% increase from $638 million in 2024, and accounted for nearly a third (30.7%) of the continent's total funding. While a majority ($582 million or 59.1%) of Kenya's funding was debt, equity funding nearly doubled to $383 million, signaling a return of investor confidence. This surge was primarily driven by large rounds secured by major energy companies like d.light, Sun King, M-Kopa, Burn, and PowerGen. However, early-stage funding saw a decline, with only 75 ventures raising $100,000 or more, a 22% decrease and the lowest performance on this metric among the Big Four.
Egypt displaced Nigeria to claim the second position, having raised $614 million in 2025. This represented a significant 53.5% increase from the $400 million attracted in 2024 and contributed 20% to the continental total. Roughly half of Egypt's funding was equity, with $278 million coming through debt, making it the second-largest market for debt funding and accounting for 24% of Africa’s total. In Egypt, 61 startups successfully raised $100,000 or more.
South Africa also experienced substantial growth, climbing to third place from fourth in 2024, with its startups raising $600 million in 2025. This marked a 52.3% increase from $394 million in the previous year and represented 18.7% of the total funding raised on the continent. Over 90% of South African funding ($545 million) was in the form of equity, positioning it as the biggest market for equity funding with 29% of Africa's total. Furthermore, 83 startups in South Africa raised at least $100,000, ranking it second only to Nigeria in this specific metric. Beyond the Big 4, other Western African markets like Senegal ($157 million) and Benin ($100 million) also showed notable activity in startup investments.
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