LAGOS, Feb 4 – Africa’s angel investment ecosystem reached a new phase of scale and coordination in 2025, with the number of active angel networks rising to 76 across 37 countries, according to research by African Economy Inc.
This represents a 27% increase from the previous year and signals growing institutional depth in early-stage financing across the continent.
Data mapped at the African Business Angel Network Congress show that Nigeria, South Africa, and Egypt remain the most densely populated markets for angel activity, while smaller economies such as Gambia and Liberia are emerging as frontier destinations for early-stage capital. A decade ago, Africa had fewer than 20 organized angel networks.
Beyond expansion in numbers, collaboration among investors has intensified. Syndicated investments accounted for 50% of deals in 2025, up sharply from 35% a year earlier, while cross-border transactions climbed to 48% from 32%. The shift reflects a move away from isolated individual cheques toward pooled capital structures capable of backing larger rounds and pan-African startups.
Average angel cheques remain relatively small, typically below $25,000, but collective deployment is increasing. COREangels MEA was recognized as Network of the Year for cross-border execution, while Jozi Angels in South Africa and Lagos Angel Network in Nigeria have each backed more than 50 startups, highlighting the growing influence of market leaders.
Sector preferences are also becoming clearer. Fintech attracted 35% of angel investments in 2025, followed by agritech at 25% and climate technology at 18%. Mentorship and operational support are increasingly embedded, with 72% of investments accompanied by structured founder support.
Total venture funding into African startups reached $3.6 billion across 635 rounds in 2025, with local angel investors participating in roughly 40% of those deals. More than 5,000 individual angels are now active on the continent.
Looking ahead, angel networks are targeting annual deployment of $100 million across 500 startups by 2027. African Economy Inc. projects that angel investors could account for 15% of all pre-seed and seed-stage funding within two years, supported by regulatory reforms and improved founder readiness programs.
The rapid expansion of organized angel networks underscores a broader shift toward locally anchored capital formation, reinforcing the role of African investors in financing Africa’s next generation of companies.