Digital Africa has announced a new pan-African seed fund aimed at supporting early-stage startups in African markets that often struggle to attract venture capital funding.
The new Digital Africa Seed Fund, unveiled during the Africa Forward Summit 2026 in Nairobi on 12 May 2026, plans to raise between €30 million and €50 million. The fund will invest between €300,000 and €2 million in around 30 technology startups across roughly 20 African countries.
The initiative is focused mainly on regions that continue to receive limited investment attention, including parts of Francophone West Africa, East Africa, and other underfunded startup ecosystems across the continent.
Focus on Overlooked Startup Markets
The launch comes as concerns continue to grow about how African startup funding remains heavily concentrated in a few major technology hubs such as Lagos, Nairobi, Cape Town, and Cairo.
Many founders in smaller or less-developed ecosystems often struggle to secure institutional funding, mentorship, and long-term support needed to scale their businesses.
Digital Africa believes strong opportunities exist in these underserved markets, but says the startup pipeline remains fragmented and difficult for investors to access consistently.
The organisation hopes the new fund will help close that gap by backing startups earlier and helping them grow into businesses capable of attracting larger investors later.
More Than Just Capital
Unlike some traditional investment vehicles, Digital Africa says the fund will combine financing with technical and operational support.
The organisation plans to work closely with local partners, ecosystem builders, and funding networks to improve startup sourcing and provide post-investment support to founders after deals are completed.
This approach is designed to help the fund identify promising startups outside the continent’s most established technology hubs.
However, managing investments across 20 countries presents significant challenges. Industry observers note that maintaining strong support systems, consistent investment standards, and local market understanding across multiple regions will be critical to the fund’s success.
Part of a Wider France-Africa Strategy
The launch also reflects broader efforts by France to reshape its relationship with African countries through business, technology, and investment partnerships.
The fund was announced during the closing session of the Africa Forward Summit, where French President Emmanuel Macron said his office had secured €23 billion in investment commitments for Africa.
In recent years, France’s relationship with several African countries, particularly in the Sahel region, has faced tension following military coups and the withdrawal of French forces from countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger.
Against that background, initiatives like the Digital Africa Seed Fund are seen as part of a wider attempt to strengthen economic and innovation ties with the continent.
Pressure to Deliver Results
Although the fund benefits from development finance backing and support within the AFD Group ecosystem, its long-term success will depend on practical execution rather than political announcements.
The key challenge will be whether the fund can consistently identify strong startups in overlooked markets, provide meaningful long-term support, and generate successful outcomes for founders and investors alike.
For many African startups, investment tickets ranging from €300,000 to €2 million could make a major difference, especially in markets where early-stage funding remains limited.
Ultimately, founders and investors will judge the initiative by how effectively it delivers support on the ground rather than the scale of the announcement itself.

