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Why Nigerian startups are losing venture capital to Kenya in 2026

As Kenya surges ahead in VC funding, Nigeria faces declining capital
Why Nigerian startups are losing venture capital to Kenya in 2026
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Kenya’s 2025 fundraising haul effectively reset the rules of Africa’s venture capital game, and Nigeria, once the continent’s undisputed champion, is still trying to figure out how to play on the new field.  

Key takeaways

  • Kenya’s total funding surged past $980 million in 2025, driven by a wave of venture debt in the clean energy sector, a capital structure Nigeria has largely failed to attract.
  • Nigeria’s funding contracted by 17% year-on-year to $343 million, making it the only Big Four market to shrink despite leading the continent in total deal count (86 ventures raising at least $100,000, the highest on the continent). 
  • Domestic African investors now account for 45 percent of all venture commitments, up from 23 percent in previous years.
  • The average deal size in Kenya’s Q3 2025 reached $43.1 million, while Nigeria’s largest disclosed deal in early 2026, Moniepoint’s $90 million round from 2025, remains the exception, not the rule. 

Kenyan startups raised $984 million, accounting for nearly one-third of the continent’s total funding and marking the largest annual haul by any African market since 2022. Nigeria, by contrast, came last among the Big Four markets of Kenya, Egypt, South Africa, and Nigeria, capturing just 11 percent of continental funding, its lowest share since 2019. This is the second year in a row that the East African nation is taking the lead. 

Across the continent, startups raised $3.2 billion in 2025, a 40 percent increase from 2024 and the first annual rise after two consecutive years of contraction. But the recovery was uneven. 

This article examines the precise data that defines the funding gap, names the specific investor concerns driving capital away from Lagos, and breaks down the Kenyan policy mechanisms and market structures that are producing a different outcome. 

Kenya vs Nigeria startup funding environment at a glance

MetricKenya (2025)Nigeria (2025)
Total startup funding$984 million$343 million
Year-on-year trend+52% surge to nearly $1 billion-17% decline
Debt vs equity split60% debt, 40% equity83% equity, debt minimal
Average deal size (Q3 2025)$43.1 millionFragmented; sub-$10 million typical
Dominant funded sectorsEnergy (debt-heavy), Fintech, Agri-techFintech, Deeptech, Logistics
Top investor concernSustainability of the debt-driven funding modelFX volatility and capital repatriation risk
Domestic investor participationGrowing, active local funds (45% continent-wide)Nascent; largely untapped potential
Market concentration82% of funding goes to the top 5 startups82.9% goes to top 11 startups

The numbers that define the gap

In 2025, Kenyan startups raised $984 million, a 52% increase from 2024 and the largest annual capital injection by any African market since 2022. Nigeria, by contrast, pulled in just $343 million, a 17% year-on-year decline that left it behind Kenya, Egypt, and South Africa.

Nigeria led the continent in deal count, with 86 ventures raising at least $100,000, more than any other African country. But activity didn’t translate into value. The market fragmented into smaller rounds, and equity investment declined 22 percent year-on-year. 

Meanwhile, Kenya concentrated its funding, 82% percent of the $984 million went to just five mature startups, with debt accounting for 60% of total capital. The average deal size in Kenya as of Q3 2025 hit $43.1 million. 

In 2021, Nigeria led Africa with $1.8 billion, over a third of the continent’s total. Four years later, it’s firmly at the bottom among its peers. The decline tracks a broader structural shift: East Africa captured $1.8 billion in venture debt across the continent in 2025, nearly doubling year-on-year, while Nigeria remains overwhelmingly equity-dependent.

Why investors are choosing Kenya over Nigeria

Everyone knows that capital flows with confidence. And right now, confidence in Nigeria is eroding for reasons unrelated to founder quality.

Regulatory unpredictability

Over the past few years, Nigeria has seen abrupt shifts in foreign exchange management, tax regimes, and capital controls, each one catching the market off guard. While other African markets, like Kenya,  have their own challenges, they’ve been better at providing clear forward guidance and sticking to it.

The Emirates airline dispute 

When the UAE suspended flights to Nigeria for nearly a year over $85 million in trapped funds, foreign investors got nervous. The Private Equity and Venture Capital Association of Nigeria has documented these capital repatriation concerns extensively, as investors remain apprehensive about committing capital they can’t withdraw.

Foreign exchange volatility 

Since the naira was floated in June 2023, it’s lost nearly 70 percent of its value against the dollar. For startups earning revenue in naira but promising dollar returns, the math becomes brutal. 

Over-reliance on foreign capital 

For years, the Nigerian startup ecosystem grew on international dollars. But when those dollars slowed, caused by currency risk and global repricing, the rug moved. Kenya’s deeper integration with this local capital base, including African DFIs, which now contribute 63% of deployed development finance, provides the stability Nigeria lacks.

What is Kenya doing differently?

Let me walk you through the structural choices that explain Kenya’s ascent, because this isn’t accidental.

The Nairobi International Financial Centre (NIFC) tax incentives

Under the Finance Act 2025: 

  • Startups certified by the NIFC now enjoy a 15% corporate tax rate for the first three years and a 20% rate for the following four years. 
  • For larger investors committing Sh3 billion ($23 million), the rate drops to 15% for a full decade. 
  • Dividends paid by these companies are exempt from tax (including withholding tax) if the company reinvests at least KES 250 million ($1.93 million) back into Kenya’s economy.

This is how you signal seriousness.

Kenya’s regulatory sandbox

While Nigeria’s Startup Act exists on paper, Kenya’s policy environment, even without a fully passed startup bill, has delivered tangible sandbox mechanisms. 

The Kenya Information and Communications (Amendment) Bill, 2025, formally empowers the Communications Authority (CA) to issue special authorizations for technology trials, creating a legislated sandbox that gives innovators legal cover to experiment.

Clean energy captured venture debt 

East Africa accounted for over two-thirds of Africa’s $1.8 billion venture debt in 2025, with Kenya alone representing 22% of all debt transactions.

Firms like d.light, Sun King, and M-Kopa raised nine-figure debt rounds because they operate in sectors with predictable cash flows (e.g., solar payments and energy subscriptions) that lenders understand. 

Nigeria’s fintech-heavy, equity-dependent model doesn’t fit that mould.

MSME policy public participation

The MSME Policy 2025 was shaped through nationwide public participation:

  • Consultations with associations.
  • Private sector actors.
  • Development partners across every region. 

This approach builds trust and gives assurance that policies won’t shift without warning.

Domestic institutional capital

Kenyan pension funds and local limited partners (LPs) are increasingly active. The Kenya Pension Fund Investment Consortium (KEPFIC) brings together local pension schemes with over $5 billion in aggregate assets, of which $115 million has been earmarked for alternative asset investments, including private equity.

The National Pension Commission, on the other hand, permits pension funds to allocate up to 5% to infrastructure, VC, and private equity, but the deployment hasn’t followed. 

What Nigeria must do, and what founders should do now

Closing this gap requires two separate playbooks — one for policymakers, one for founders.

For policymakers, three specific reforms

  1. Fix the FX repatriation channel with a clear, enforceable mechanism. The Central Bank’s recent reforms, including the Electronic Foreign Exchange Market Surveillance System (EFEMS), have moved Nigeria off the FATF grey list and EU high-risk list. Investors need to see that dollars can actually leave before they’ll bring more in.
  2. Faithfully implement the tangible benefits of the Nigeria Startup Act. The Act’s tax incentives exist, but the 2025 Tax Reform Act replaced the old Pioneer Status Incentive with the Economic Development Incentive (EDI): a 5 percent annual tax credit on qualifying capital expenditure. Startups need clarity on how to access this, not just legislation that sits on a shelf. 
  3. Stabilise and simplify the tax regime to end multiple taxation. Despite federal harmonisation efforts, state and local governments continue imposing overlapping levies. 

For founders, three practical steps

  1. Assume regulatory rigour and have flawless compliance before fundraising. In 2026, investors are focused on compliant startups. Get it right early.
  2. Diversify capital sources aggressively toward emerging domestic investors. African investors now account for 45% of venture commitments. Start building relationships with local capital now.
  3. Build for resilience and revenue, not just growth metrics. Kenya’s debt-heavy winners (e.g., M-Kopa, d.light, Sun King) succeed because they have predictable, asset-backed cash flows. Prove you can generate sustainable revenue in naira, and investors will find a way to back you.

FAQs

What is the single biggest reason investors choose Kenya over Nigeria?

FX predictability; every other factor flows from this. 

How is the Nigerian Startup Act performing?

The Startup Act, signed in 2022, has a good framework and contains excellent provisions: tax incentives, regulatory sandboxes, labelled startup status, and angel investor exemptions. But it has suffered from poor implementation

Conclusion 

Nigeria’s decline from continental leader to last among the Big Four is the result of specific, identifiable, and correctable policy failures. Over-reliance on foreign capital that fled at the first sign of currency instability, and an equity-dependent model

The Nigerian Startup Act exists. The tax reforms have passed. Pension fund capacity sits idle. The legal tools to reverse this trajectory are already on the books. What’s lacking is implementation, predictability, and the political will to make foreign capital believe that dollars can enter and exit without trauma.

The window to reverse this is open. It will not stay open forever.

Citations 

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