Manny Ita
Nigeria’s startup ecosystem entered 2026 marked by a heavy concentration of capital, as a small group of well-established companies continued to attract the overwhelming share of investor funding. According to the latest compiled deal data released on January 29, 2026, the top 11 most-funded startups raised a combined $367.2 million, accounting for 82.93% of the total $442.8 million raised by 98 startups over the preceding twelve-month period. This sharp concentration highlights a persistent investor preference for scale-ready business models and “resilient innovation” amid tighter global funding conditions and local currency volatility.
The data reveals that fintech remains the dominant force in the landscape, with six startups in the top 11 accounting for $211 million, or 47.65% of the total elite-group funding. Logistics and transportation followed as a significant secondary sector, securing $100 million, while energy and climate-focused startups attracted $46.2 million. Enterprise services rounded out the major allocations with $10 million. Analysts note that this lopsided distribution underscores a risk-off approach, where capital is largely directed toward companies with proven business models in payments, financial infrastructure, and essential services.
Transparency continues to be a challenge within the ecosystem, as 12 of the 98 startups did not disclose their specific funding amounts. However, for those that did, names like Moniepoint and Lagride led the surge, both securing $100 million rounds, followed by LemFi at $53 million and Kredete at $22 million. Other notable performers included Omnibiz ($20 million), Arnergy ($15 million), and Mopo ($15 million). Even as the total funding for the Nigerian market saw a 17% year-on-year decline in 2025, the underlying digital economy is projected to reach a valuation of $18.3 billion by the end of 2026, fueled by the maturation of cloud services and AI integration.
Experts suggest that the current funding environment represents a “definitive shift” from a fragmented ecosystem to one defined by strategic consolidation. Large players are increasingly acquiring smaller startups to expand geographically or enhance product capabilities, a trend that saw merger and acquisition activity jump by 72% over the last year. For the remainder of 2026, the focus for Nigerian founders is expected to move away from “growth at all costs” toward sustainability, operational efficiency, and a clearer path to profitability to satisfy increasingly cautious investors.

