African startups closed the first half of 2026 with a reported $1.44 billion in funding, slightly ahead of the $1.42 billion raised during the same period in 2025. Yet, investors backed far fewer companies, with 146 disclosed deals in H1 2026 compared with 252 a year earlier, concentrating larger amounts of capital in a smaller pool of startups.
Fintech remained one of the continent’s most attractive sectors, but investor behaviour evolved alongside the broader market. Debt financing featured prominently among the largest transactions, and Egypt is the dominant destination for capital, and companies building financial infrastructure attracted significant attention.
Here are the biggest disclosed fintech funding rounds in Africa during the first half of 2026 and what they reveal about where capital flowed.
| Rank | Company | Country | Amount | Funding type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | valU | Egypt | $63 million | Consumer lending debt facility |
| 2 | MNT-Halan | Egypt | $41.3 million | Conventional debt capital |
| 3 | Blnk | Egypt | $37.1 million | Mixed funding ($12.5m equity, $24.6m debt) |
| 4 | MNT-Halan | Egypt | $30 million | Growth equity |
| 5 | Stabyl | Nigeria | $2.7 million | Late-stage seed |
| 6 | Daya | Regional | $2.4 million | Enterprise stablecoin payments |
| 7 | NjiaPay | South Africa | $2.1 million | Seed |
| 8 | Sika Financial | Ghana | $2 million | Institutional round |
Read also: Here are the top CBN directives that shaped Nigeria’s financial sector in the first half of 2026
Egypt dominated the leaderboard
4 of the 8 largest disclosed fintech funding rounds announced during H1 2026 went to Egyptian companies. Combined, they accounted for $171.4 million, far exceeding the funding disclosed by fintechs from the other countries represented on the list.
The country’s largest transaction came from consumer finance platform valU, which secured a $63 million debt facility in January.
Digital lender MNT-Halan appeared twice on the list, first with $41.3 million in conventional debt capital before raising another $30 million in growth equity. Digital lending platform Blnk completed the country’s fourth major fintech transaction with a combined $37.1 million package consisting of equity and debt.
The concentration reflects more than a successful six months for Egyptian startups. It also points to a market where investors continue backing businesses that have reached sufficient scale to absorb larger pools of capital.

Debt financing featured heavily
The composition of the funding rounds tells another story.
3 of the 4 largest transactions relied primarily on debt, while Blnk‘s raise combined debt and equity. Only 1 of the 4 biggest rounds was purely equity.
The broader African funding market moved in the same direction. During H1 2026, startups raised $818 million through equity financing, $614 million through debt and another $9 million in grants. Debt financing accounted for a significant share of capital deployed across the continent as investors increasingly backed companies with established revenue models and clearer paths to repayment.
For fintechs, debt can provide growth capital without requiring founders to dilute ownership to the same extent as traditional equity rounds. Lending businesses also have funding needs that differ from software startups because they require capital to support loan books alongside business expansion.

Infrastructure continued to attract investors
The funding list also provides a snapshot of where investors believe the next phase of African fintech growth could emerge.
Consumer lending remains well represented through valU, MNT-Halan and Blnk. Beyond lending, several of the smaller rounds focused on infrastructure that supports the wider financial ecosystem.
- Nigeria’s Stabyl secured $2.7 million for foreign exchange infrastructure.
- Regional payments company Daya raised $2.4 million for enterprise stablecoin payment infrastructure.
- South Africa’s NjiaPay closed a $2.1 million seed round to build payment orchestration technology.
- Ghana’s Sika Financial raised $2 million for cross-border clearing infrastructure.
Each company addresses a different challenge, yet all operate beneath the consumer layer of financial services. Their products enable payments, settlement, treasury operations or financial connectivity for businesses rather than competing directly for retail customers.
Nigeria appeared on the list, but with a different profile
Nigeria remained represented among the continent’s biggest disclosed fintech raises through Stabyl, which announced a $2.7 million late-stage seed round led by KongaPay.
The amount stands well below the largest Egyptian transactions, though it reflects continued investor interest in infrastructure businesses addressing foreign exchange challenges.
The funding also arrived during a period when Nigeria’s financial sector experienced one of its busiest regulatory half-years in recent memory. Several Central Bank of Nigeria directives focused on payments, compliance, identity verification and financial infrastructure, areas that increasingly overlap with products being developed by fintech companies.
That pattern mirrors broader conversations across Africa’s fintech ecosystem, where attention continues shifting towards the infrastructure supporting digital finance.
Read also: All CBN’s Directives in H1 2026 and how they affected banks and fintechs