African startups have raised $3.9 billion across 506 deals in 2025, signaling a steadying pulse for the continent’s venture ecosystem after two years of global market adjustment.
This was stated in the newly released 2025 Venture Capital Activity in Africa report by the African Private Capital Association (AVCA).
The venture capital (VC) market is a segment of private equity financing where investors provide capital to high-potential, early-stage, or startup companies in exchange for equity. It acts as a crucial funding source for innovative, high-risk businesses that lack access to traditional bank loans.
The report stated that deal activity stabilised in 2025, driven by early-stage resilience, rising domestic investor participation, and the expansion of venture debt.
It said that “Africa’s venture market entered 2025 in a phase of disciplined stabilisation. Deal volume rose four per cent year-on-year, making Africa the only global region where venture activity did not decline.
The report also noted “one of the most consequential shifts in 2025 was the continued rise of venture debt as a financing tool. Venture debt reached $1.8 billion, nearly doubling YoY and extending a three-year growth trend.
“Debt has increasingly moved from a complementary instrument to a core component of startup financing, particularly for growth-stage companies seeking to extend runway, manage dilution, and optimise capital efficiency. This shift brings Africa more closely in line with financing dynamics observed in more mature emerging venture markets, with East Africa accounting for more than two-thirds of regional deal value.”
According to the report, venture-backed exits reached a new high of 34, rising 31 per cent YoY to outpace the more marginal one per cent growth recorded globally. North Africa led by exit volume, while Southern Africa accounted for the largest share of exit value, at $288 million.
“Financial sponsors increased their participation and reached a new high in 2025, with growing presence in more mature sectors such as FinTech, and Africa-based buyers accounted for 54 per cent of exits, signalling a growing base of local and regional acquirers alongside continued international participation.”
It highlighted that “domestic investor participation reached a new high in 2025. African investors accounted for 45 per cent of total venture fund commitments, up from an average of 23 per cent between 2022 and 2024. This shift was led by corporates and African development finance institutions (DFIs).
“While overall DFI participation declined to 27 per cent, composition localised: African DFIs contributed 63 per cent of DFI capital deployed, reversing earlier years when international DFIs dominated commitments. Domestic capital is positioning itself as a more durable anchor for innovation, reducing the ecosystem’s historical reliance on external capital sources and sentiments.”
Speaking on the findings, the chief executive officer of AVCA, Abi Mustapha-Maduakor said, “The African venture capital ecosystem is recalibrating towards patient, structured and locally anchored capital. The record-breaking domestic participation and exit activity we see shows that African investors are increasingly confident in backing homegrown businesses and achieving exits, providing strong validation of the ecosystem’s long-term invest-ability.”
He stated that the priority now is to continue supporting the industry in diversifying its allocation pool to ensure adequate funding reaches the investors backing high-growth startups across the continent.
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