Nigeria is stepping into the spotlight as one of Africa’s biggest players in venture capital, with 22 homegrown startups making it onto the continent’s Top 100 most funded list since 2019. According to Africa: The Big Deal’s latest report, these companies have collectively helped Nigeria secure its place as a true startup powerhouse. The report shows that Africa’s Top 100 startups attracted $12.8 billion in funding—about 69 percent of all investments raised by more than 2,300 ventures across the continent since 2019. While South Africa leads the rankings with 23 startups, Nigeria follows closely with 22. However, Nigeria stands out by placing the largest number of companies in the top 20, showing just how central the country has become to Africa’s tech scene. One of the key voices celebrating this progress is Llew Claasen, managing partner at South Africa-based Newtown Partners. He praised Nigeria’s youthful population and rich talent pool, describing the ecosystem as one that “holds exciting opportunities for the future.”
Fintech Leads the Charge
When it comes to the sectors driving this growth, fintech continues to dominate. Seven Nigerian-born ventures, including household names like Flutterwave, Opay, Interswitch, PalmPay, Moniepoint and Moove, all sit in the elite top 20. Andela, once strongly Africa-focused but now more US-driven, also rounds out Nigeria’s list. Speaking at the Money20/20 conference in Riyadh, Flutterwave CEO Olugbenga Agboola highlighted how fintech is changing the lives of everyday Nigerians. He explained that public-private partnerships are “expanding financial inclusion for women and youth, enabling cross-border payments, supporting CBDC adoption, and reducing remittance costs by 1.5 percent.” The figures also back up this optimism. Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, director-general of Nigeria’s National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), noted that Nigeria’s fintech industry now has 217 startups and four unicorns. He credited innovation programs led by NITDA for producing five of Africa’s eight unicorns.
Beyond the Big Four
The rankings also highlight the importance of Africa’s “Big Four” startup hubs—South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and Egypt—which together account for 80 percent of the Top 100 ventures. South Africa’s list skews heavily toward fintech, with 15 of its 23 companies in that space. Nigeria and Egypt, meanwhile, show more balance, while Kenya distinguishes itself with diversification in agriculture, retail technology, and energy. West Africa as a whole also shines, producing 31 of the Top 100 startups, including names like ThriveAgric, Zeepay, and CarePoint. Ghana in particular stands out with five representatives, while smaller economies such as Benin, Senegal, Togo, and the Democratic Republic of Congo each have at least one startup on the list.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has pledged continued support for Nigeria’s booming digital economy. At a recent meeting with Flutterwave and Alami Capital leaders, he declared, “Nigeria is open for business! By supporting home-grown digital platforms, we are driving job creation, diversifying our economy, and solidifying our position as Africa’s largest economy.” From fintech and energy to agriculture and retail, Nigeria’s presence in the rankings makes one thing clear—the country is not just participating in Africa’s startup race. It is shaping the future of the continent’s innovation economy.








