Africa’s startup ecosystem continues to thrive, attracting strong investor interest despite global economic challenges. In August 2025, 39 African startups raised a combined $187.6 million, with the top 10 startups alone securing $167.1 million.
According to Research, South Africa dominated with more than half of the inflows, while Nigeria, Kenya, Egypt, Ghana, and Rwanda also recorded significant deals.
Regional Breakdown of Startup Funding
- Southern Africa: $93.3 million, driven almost entirely by the landmark Ikhokha acquisition by Nedbank.
- Eastern Africa: $29.4 million across four startups in healthcare, telecom, logistics, and services.
- West Africa & North Africa: Multiple deals across fintech, agritech, and cleantech, showing resilience in Nigeria, Egypt, and Ghana.
This data underscores how mega-deals can shift funding landscapes, while mid-sized rounds diversify investment flows.
Top 10 African Startup Deals – August 2025
- Ikhokha (South Africa) – $93.3M acquisition by Nedbank
- Landmark deal integrating SME-focused mobile payments into Nedbank’s ecosystem.
- Koolboks (Nigeria/France) – $11M Series A
- Solar-powered cold storage for food and healthcare; backed by KawiSafi Ventures and Aruwa Capital.
- Hewatele (Kenya) – $10.5M
- Expanding medical oxygen production facilities to meet regional healthcare demand.
- Ampersand (East Africa) – $10M
- Scaling electric motorcycle fleet and battery-swap infrastructure.
- Breadfast (Egypt) – $10M Series B2
- ValU (Egypt) – $9.4M securitised bond
- Expanding “buy now, pay later” and consumer credit services.
- Chowdeck (Nigeria/Ghana) – $9M Series A
- On-demand food delivery with plans to open 500 dark stores by 2026.
- Complete Farmer (Ghana) – $5M debt financing
- Scaling digital agritech platform connecting African farmers to global markets.
- HoneyCoin (Kenya) – $4.9M seed funding
- Stablecoin-compatible payments platform for Africa, LATAM, and Asia.
- Poa Internet (Kenya) – $4M debt funding-Expanding affordable internet services for underserved urban markets.
Key Trends in African Startup Funding
- South Africa’s dominance: Ikhokha’s $93.3M acquisition accounted for 55.8% of all August funding.
- Fintech resilience: Startups like HoneyCoin, ValU, and Ikhokha continue to attract capital.
- Healthcare focus: Deals such as Hewatele reflect growing investor attention to Africa’s health sector.
- Clean energy and agritech: Koolboks and Complete Farmer highlight sustainable solutions scaling across the continent.
Final Thoughts
The $187.6 million raised in August 2025 underscores Africa’s position as a global growth frontier for venture capital. With investments spanning fintech, agritech, healthcare, and cleantech, the continent is proving resilient and innovative.
For investors, the message is clear: Africa’s startups are scaling solutions for food security, financial inclusion, clean energy, and healthcare access, making it one of the world’s most dynamic entrepreneurial ecosystems.