Over the past six years, a new hierarchy of venture capital power cities has taken shape across the continent. This shift is driven by deal-flow momentum, fundraising activity, exit creation, and a steadily deepening institutional investor presence. Together, these forces are redrawing the map of where African capital concentrates and grows.
Lagos, Nairobi, Cairo, and Cape Town continue to anchor continental capital flows. Indeed, the “Big Four” markets of Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Egypt still account for roughly 70 to 80 percent of venture funding across Africa, according to data compiled by Partech and Briter Bridges. Moreover, the gap between these hubs and other markets keeps widening.
Lagos remains Africa’s largest venture ecosystem by startup density, investor presence, unicorn creation, and capital deployed. Although funding cooled after the 2021 and 2022 boom, the city still dominates in fintech and in venture-backed company creation.
Nairobi, meanwhile, recorded the strongest acceleration in venture funding, particularly across climate tech, clean energy, mobility, and fintech. As a result, East Africa became the largest funding region in 2025, while Kenya stayed among the continent’s most attractive destinations for venture capital. Analysts at Africa: The Big Deal note that Kenya led the year with close to one billion dollars raised.
Beyond the established centres, emerging hubs such as Kigali, Casablanca, and Accra are gaining genuine traction. Their growth scores signal rising investor confidence and a broader distribution of capital across more economies.
This is not simply startup growth. Rather, it reflects the formation of Africa’s long-term capital-markets architecture, a structural shift that institutions like the African Development Bank have long encouraged. As global capital deepens its interest, investors from Asia and the Gulf region are increasingly part of the story.
So what must other African cities do to become investment hubs and balance capital distribution? The answer lies in stronger regulation, deeper local funding pools, clearer exit pathways, and consistent policy. With those foundations, the next tier of cities can convert early momentum into durable, investable ecosystems.
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