In 2025, African startups raised a total of $3.9 billion across 506 deals, signaling a stabilising trend for the continent’s venture ecosystem after two years of global market adjustments, according to the African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association’s (AVCA) 2025 Venture Capital Activity in Africa report. While overall capital deployment remained below previous peak levels, deal activity steadied, underpinned by early-stage resilience, increased domestic investor participation, and the growth of venture debt as a key financing tool.
The African venture market experienced a disciplined phase of stabilisation in 2025, with deal volume rising 4% year-on-year, making Africa the only global region to see venture activity maintain growth. Seed and early-stage deals showed notable strength, with median deal sizes reaching multi-year highs, reflecting investor conviction despite a more selective funding environment. Fundraising timelines from Seed to Series A shortened, indicating a more efficient early-stage progression. At the upper end of the market, eight megadeals raised a combined $1.3 billion, partially offsetting the contraction in late-stage equity activity, which fell to its lowest level since 2020.
Venture debt emerged as a major trend, nearly doubling to $1.8 billion and marking three consecutive years of growth. Initially a complementary tool, debt is increasingly used by growth-stage companies to extend runway, manage dilution, and optimise capital efficiency, aligning Africa’s financing landscape with more mature emerging venture markets. East Africa accounted for over two-thirds of the regional deal value, highlighting its central role in the continent’s venture activity.
Exit activity reached record levels in 2025, with 34 venture-backed exits, up 31% year-on-year, surpassing the global growth rate of 1%. Trade sales continued to dominate exits, representing over 70% of both volume and value. North Africa led in exit volume, while Southern Africa contributed the largest share of exit value at $288 million. Financial sponsors increased participation, particularly in sectors like FinTech, and Africa-based buyers accounted for 54% of exits, reflecting a growing local and regional investor base alongside ongoing international involvement.
Domestic investor participation surged to a record high, with African investors accounting for 45% of total venture fund commitments, up from an average of 23% between 2022 and 2024. This rise was driven largely by corporates and African development finance institutions (DFIs). While overall DFI participation declined to 27%, African DFIs contributed 63% of DFI capital deployed, reversing previous dominance by international DFIs. The trend towards domestic capital is helping reduce reliance on external funding and strengthening the long-term resilience of the African venture ecosystem.
Commenting on the findings, Abi Mustapha-Maduakor, CEO of AVCA, noted that the African venture capital ecosystem is recalibrating towards patient, structured, and locally anchored capital. The record domestic participation and exit activity demonstrate growing confidence among African investors in homegrown businesses, validating the ecosystem’s long-term investability. Moving forward, the focus will be on diversifying funding allocation to ensure high-growth startups across the continent continue to access sufficient capital.







