Africa’s venture ecosystem showed remarkable resilience in 2025, raising $3.9 billion in capital funding.
This is mostly because the continent’s tech founders are actively solving fundamental infrastructural challenges, bridging gaps in financial inclusion, healthcare, and supply chains with complex AI.
However, scaling deep-tech solutions requires specialized technical infrastructure, advanced cloud capabilities, and strategic mentorship to complement this capital.
Accelerator programs provide these exact tools, ensuring local innovations can sustainably grow into businesses that power the continent’s digital economy.
That is why it’s big deal that out of the 15 Pan-African group of companies to join the10th cohort of the Google for Startups Accelerator Africa, four are Nigerian tech startups
The indigenous start-ups – Bani, MasteryHive AI, Regxta and Termii were chosen from an exceptionally competitive pool of nearly 2,600 applications, which further proves Nigeria’s prominent position in the continent’s tech ecosystem.
Google said that with an acceptance rate of less than 1%, their selection highlights the immense technical talent and resilience emerging from Nigeria’s digital ecosystem.
The statement may not be far-fetched considering the roles these four tech startups play, particularly in the country’s fintech ecosystem.
They are utilizing Artificial Intelligence to address critical local and regional challenges.
For instance, Bani is a cross-border payments infrastructure platform eliminating settlement delays for African businesses trading globally.
