2025 is shaping up as a landmark year for Nigeria’s technology sector, with a wave of multi-million-dollar investments empowering homegrown startups across fintech, clean energy, logistics, edtech and payments.
What’s Driving the Surge
- According to data from the tracking platform Africa: The Big Deal, Nigerian startups collectively raised US $176 million in the first half of 2025 — at a time when global economic conditions remain uncertain.
- On the continent-wide level, African startups have drawn more than US $2.2 billion so far in 2025, underscoring renewed investor confidence in Africa’s innovation landscape.
- The $2.2 bn funding milestone surpasses total funding for the prior year, illustrating how investors are returning with larger cheque sizes — even as the number of deals remains lower than peak levels.
Who’s Getting Funded — and Why It Matters
Among the standout beneficiaries of this investment wave:
- LemFi, a remittance and cross-border payments platform, raised US $53 million in a Series B round — the largest single raise for a Nigerian startup this year. The funding is expected to support its expansion across multiple global corridors and deepen financial inclusion for diaspora and migrant communities.
- Accrue, a fintech firm pivoting into cross-border payments, secured US $1.58 million in seed funding to scale infrastructure and services targeting businesses in Nigeria and other African markets.
- SunFi and Salpha Energy — clean energy & solar-financing startups — also raised early-stage funding, reflecting growing investor appetite for sustainable energy solutions across off-grid regions in Nigeria.
This wave of funding doesn’t only benefit fintech: sectors like clean energy, logistics, agritech, and edtech are beginning to attract investment, signalling a broader diversification away from payments-only investments.
Government Support & The Role of Institutional Funding
Part of this growth is backed by government-led initiatives. The federal programme iDICE (Investment in Digital and Creative Enterprises) recently closed a US $64 million first-round anchor fund managed by Ventures Platform — marking a strong institutional commitment to supporting tech and creative startups nationwide.
The new venture fund is expected to channel capital to early- and growth-stage companies across Nigeria in 2026, opening up more opportunities for young founders, innovators, and entrepreneurs.
What It Means for Nigeria & Africa’s Tech Future
- The fresh capital inflow — even amid global economic headwinds — suggests growing confidence in Nigeria’s youthful population, increasing digitization, and entrepreneurial talent.
- Expansion beyond fintech into energy, agritech, logistics and education may help address critical national challenges such as energy access, financial inclusion, and unemployment.
- With institutional support and rising global investor interest, 2026 could bring even more “unicorns” (startups valued over US $1 billion), broadening Nigeria’s digital economy and raising its profile on the global stage.
Challenges & What to Watch
Analysts caution, however, that despite the surge in funding:
- Many sectors outside fintech remain underfunded; there’s concern about overconcentration in financial services.
- Startups must navigate macroeconomic pressures — foreign exchange volatility, rising costs, and regulatory uncertainty — to deliver sustainable growth.
- Investors and startup leaders call for stronger support systems: robust infrastructure, regulatory clarity, and long-term commitment to build resilience in non-fintech sectors.
As investments flow and innovators rise, Nigeria’s tech ecosystem appears to be entering a new phase — one where digital finance, clean energy, inclusive payments, and sustainable infrastructure could reshape not only the startup scene, but the economic future of millions of Nigerians.