I spent one month tracking every Nigerian startup funding round from 2018 to 2025.
$4.17 billion. 293 companies. 528 deals.
The pattern that emerged shocked me
While founders chase Fintech (capturing 64% of all capital), the data reveals a hidden graveyard. Fintech has the WORST follow-on funding rate (40%) among all major sectors. Meanwhile, CleanTech startups — with just $228M raised — achieved 90% survival and 70% follow-on funding.
I analyzed every pivot, every acquisition, every shutdown. I mapped 72 subsectors across 8 years. I tracked which business models live and which struggle to survive.
Here’s what the numbers actually say.
The Survival Spectrum: Why Most Startups Fail
Across 72 subsectors and 293 companies, survival rates cluster into predictable tiers based on a simple formula: B2B + Essential Services + Recurring Revenue + Regulatory Tailwinds.
🟢 The 100% Survival Tier
The Pattern: Companies selling what businesses can’t operate without.
Examples:
- HR & Payroll SaaS: SeamlessHR ($12.4M), PaidHR ($2.9M)
- Tech Skills Bootcamps (ISA Model): Decagon, Semicolon, Bildup AI — ALL operating
- Energy-as-a-Service (PAYG): Rensource ($44.5M), Watt ($29M) — ALL 5 operating
- Digital Identity & RegTech: Seamfix, YouVerify, Prembly — 100% survival (CBN KYC mandate)
- Pharma Supply Chain: Remedial ($17.4M), Field Intelligence, DrugStoc — ALL operating
- B2B FMCG Distribution: TradeDepot ($123M), Omnibiz ($18M) — ALL 6 operating.
🟢 The 90–99% Survival Tier
Neobanks (Digital Banking): 92.9% survival — Moniepoint ($423M), OPay ($570M), Kuda ($91.6M)
But here’s the catch: 14 companies competing for the same market. Massive capital requirements. 67% follow-on rate (vs CleanTech’s 100% subsectors).
High survival, yes. But also high competition and capital intensity.
🟡 The 80–89% Survival Tier
The “pretty good but crowded” zone:
- Payment Infrastructure/BaaS: 85.7% — Flutterwave ($465M), Interswitch
- Agricultural Finance: 80% — Babban Gona ($27.7M), ThriveAgric ($65.6M)
- Consumer Credit/BNPL: 80% — CredPal ($16.8M), Aella
🟠 The 50–69% Survival Tier: The Mixed Bag
- Crypto/Web3: 53.8% — Canza, Busha, Yellow Card (7 of 13 operating)
- B2B SaaS & Enterprise: 53.8% — Wakanow, JUDY (7 of 13 operating)
- Logistics & Last-mile: 66.7% — Sendbox, Kwik, Renda (8 of 12 operating)
- WealthTech: 63.6% — Bamboo ($16.6M), PiggyVest, Cowrywise (7 of 11 operating)
Some winners emerge. Many fail. The difference? Execution, not category.
🔴 The 0–32% Survival Tier: THE GRAVEYARD
This is where dreams die.
The Death Zone:
- 54gene (Genomics): $44.8M raised → SHUTDOWN
- Farmcrowdy (Ag Crowdfunding): $7.9M raised → SHUTDOWN (pivot failed)
- EdTech Student Financing: 0% survival — ScholarX, Schoolable ALL failed
- E-commerce Enablement/SaaS: 0% — Kitcart, Momma’s Bay ALL dormant
- Loyalty/Rewards: 0% — ThankUCash ($5.3M) dormant
- SME Lending: 33.3% — Lidya ($19.7M) shutdown
- Consumer Marketplaces: 22.2% — Kippa ($3.2M) dormant
Why they fail:
- Low willingness to pay
- Capital-intensive operations without revenue
- Long R&D cycles without product-market fit
- Consumer financing without collections infrastructure
The graveyard is predictable.
The $200M Exit That Changed Everything
Let’s talk about acquisitions. Because they reveal which business models actually work.
🏆 The Big One
Stripe → Acquired Paystack (2020) — $200M
- Subsector: Payment Gateways | Raised $8M
- Result: Largest Nigerian exit. Stripe needed African market access, Paystack delivered.
🌍 Strategic Acquisitions (Big Companies Buying Startups)
Shell → Acquired Daystar Power (2021)
- Subsector: Solar/Off-Grid C&I | Raised $68M
- Result: Oil giant’s clean energy pivot. Shell bought Nigerian market access + installed solar capacity.
Risevest → Acquired Chaka (2023)
- Subsector: WealthTech Investments | Raised $1.5M
- Result: WealthTech consolidation. Buying competitor for user base + tech stack. Classic acqui-hire.
🔄 Ecosystem Consolidation (Winners Buy Losers)
Paystack → Acquired Brass (2024)
- Subsector: Neobanking B2B | Raised $1.7M
- Result: Payment winners buying banking losers. Paystack (now Stripe-owned) consolidating B2B banking.
C-One Ventures → Acquired Bankly (2025)
- Subsector: Agency Banking/POS | Raised $2M
MFS Africa → Acquired Baxi (2021–2022)
- Subsector: Agency Banking/POS | Raised $500K
- Result: Pan-African payments consolidation. MFS Africa building regional footprint through acquisitions.
🚗 Other Notable Exits
- Carbon/OneFi → Acquired Amplify (2019) — Payment Processing
- Fixit45 → Acquired iFixng (2021) — Auto-Care Services
- WhoGoHost → Acquired Sendchamp — Cloud Communications
💰 Meanwhile: The Acquirers
Three Nigerian startups became buyers themselves:
- Chowdeck → Acquired Mira POS (2025) — Food delivery buying payments
- LemFi → Acquired Pillar & Buttercrane — Cross-border consolidation
- PiggyVest → Acquired PocketApp (2022) — Savings app consolidation
The Pattern:
- Payment infrastructure attracts acquirers
- Fintech dominates exits (75%)
- Early-stage companies (<$10M raised) most likely to exit
- Strategic buyers (Stripe, Shell) pay premiums for market access
The exits are predictable too.
28 Companies That Pivoted — And What Happened
Pivots reveal which strategic moves actually work. I tracked 28 companies that changed direction. Here’s what happened.
✅ The Successful Pivots
1. Payhippo → became Rivy: The Sector Escape
- Original: SME Lending (Fintech)
- Pivot: Clean Energy Financing (CleanTech)
- Funding: $4M
- Status: OPERATING
Result: Smart escape from a failing subsector (SME Lending 33% survival) to a thriving sector (CleanTech 90% survival). They kept the lending model, changed the customer base.
This is genius. They recognized the business model worked — but the sector didn’t.
2. Carbon/OneFi: The B2C → B2B Shift
- Original: Consumer neobank
- Pivot: AI-powered SME banking + BaaS infrastructure
- Funding: $5M
- Status: OPERATING
Result: Consumer banking is commoditized. B2B infrastructure has pricing power. Now they’re selling banking-as-a-service to other fintechs.
3. OPay: The Focus Play
- Original: Super-app (fintech + food delivery + ride-hailing)
- Pivot: Fintech only
- Funding: $570M
- Status: OPERATING
Result: They killed food delivery and ride-hailing. Focused entirely on payments and agency banking. Strategic focus beats trying everything. Now valued at billions.
4. Zone (AppZone): The Infrastructure Pivot
- Original: Cloud SaaS
- Pivot: Decentralized payment switch (fiat + crypto)
- Funding: $18.8M as Zone
- Status: OPERATING
Result: Payment rails = better business than SaaS. Raised $8.5M after the pivot.
5. Nomba (KUDI.AI): The Product Expansion
- Original: Agency Banking/POS
- Pivot: Omni-channel Business Banking + POS Infrastructure
- Funding: $5M+
- Status: OPERATING
Result: Expanded from POS to full banking stack. Product expansion works when you own distribution.
Other Successful Pivots:
- ThriveAgric: Retail crowdfunding → Institutional funding (OPERATING)
- Vendease: B2B agro wholesale → Added BNPL/Credit (OPERATING, $33.3M raised)
- Aella: Lending → Insurance + Payments + Investments (OPERATING)
- Kora: Blockchain → Traditional payment infrastructure (OPERATING)
- Lendsqr: Loan management → Full lending stack + APIs (OPERATING)
- MAX: Ride-hailing → EV focus + financing (OPERATING, $39M raised)
❌ The Failed Pivots: A Cautionary Tale
Farmcrowdy: The Cautionary Tale
- Original: Agricultural crowdfunding
- Pivot: B2B agricultural tech + logistics (March 2021)
- Funding: $7.9M
- Status: SHUTDOWN
Result: The pivot didn’t save them. You can’t pivot WITHIN a fundamentally broken category. Ag Crowdfunding has 0% survival. They should’ve pivoted sectors entirely like Payhippo did.
BuyCoins → Helicarrier
- Original: Crypto exchange
- Pivot: Crypto remittance
- Funding: $7.2M
- Status: DORMANT
Result: Pivoting within a struggling crypto space didn’t help. Dormant after pivot.
The Pivot Lessons:
✅ What Works:
- B2C → B2B pivots
- Sector pivots (Fintech → CleanTech)
- Product expansion when you own distribution
- Strategic focus over diversification
❌ What Doesn’t:
- Pivoting WITHIN failing categories
- Rebranding without business model change
- Diversifying when core business is broken
50 Rebrands: Growth Signals, Not Desperation
Rebrands reveal company maturity. I tracked 50 name changes. Here’s what they mean.
📈 Growth Rebrands: International Expansion
- Plentywaka → Treepz: Expanding beyond Nigeria
- Lemonade Finance → LemFi: Cross-border remittance focus ($86.9M raised)
- Geegpay → Raenest: Full rebrand/unification ($14.5M raised)
🏦 Strategic Rebrands: Product Maturity
- TeamApt → Moniepoint: Consumer neobank focus ($423M raised) — MASSIVE success
- KUDI.AI → Nomba: Omni-channel banking ($5M+)
- AppZone → Zone: Payment network pivot ($18.8M)
- OneFi → Carbon: Consumer brand focus
- Piggybank.ng → PiggyVest: Investment platform expansion
🔧 Tech Stack Rebrands
- Wizter → Waza: B2B trade expansion ($8.5M)
- Jand2Gidi → CargoPlug: Cross-border logistics focus
- Pada HCM → PaidHR: Product maturity ($2.9M)
❌ Failed Rebrands (Rare)
Only 5 out of 50 rebrands failed:
- ScholarX → Learnly: DORMANT (EdTech student financing)
- ThankUCash → Store Smart: DORMANT (Loyalty/Rewards)
- BuyCoins → Helicarrier: DORMANT (Crypto)
- Schoolable → Allprotech: SHUTDOWN
The Rebrand Lesson: 90% success rate. Rebrands signal growth (international expansion, product maturity, strategic focus). Failed rebrands were in failing subsectors (student financing 0%, loyalty 0%, crypto 53%). Name changes don’t save bad business models.
The Numbers: 8 Years of Funding Data
I built 3 interactive Tableau dashboards with every funding round, company, and outcome. Here are the highlights.
📊 The Big Picture
The Numbers:
- $4.17B total funding across 293 companies
- 528 total deals (2018–2025)
- 70% overall survival rate
- 8 sectors, 72 subsectors analyzed
Top Companies by Funding:
- OPay: $570M (Neobanking)
- Flutterwave: $465M (Payments)
- Moniepoint: $423M (Neobanking)
- AFEX: $323M (AgriTech Commodity Trading)
- Interswitch: $110M (Payments)
Sector Breakdown:
- Fintech: $2.66B (64% of all funding), 106 companies, 184 deals
- AgriTech: $439M, 24 companies
- Digital Commerce: $408M, 42 companies
- CleanTech: $228M, 20 companies (90% survival!)
- HealthTech: $180M, 27 companies (82% survival)
📈 Funding Evolution: The Boom, Crash, and Recovery
The year-by-year breakdown tells the real story.
2018: The Foundation (72 deals)
- Total funding: $120.8M
- Biggest deal: Wakanow ($40M) — Travel Tech (Enterprise)
- Other notable deals: Kora ($12M), Paga ($10M), Flutterwave ($10M), Paystack ($8M)
- Average deal: $1.7M
- Key milestone: Ecosystem beginning. Travel Tech surprises with largest deal.
2019: Early Growth (93 deals)
- Total funding: $444.9M
- Biggest deal: OPay ($170M) — Neobanking mega-round
- Other notable deals: Andela ($100M HRTech), PalmPay ($40M), Kobo360 ($30M), Rensource Energy ($20M)
- Average deal: $4.8M (+182% from 2018)
- Key milestone: First $100M+ deal in Nigerian startup history
2020: COVID Acceleration (75 deals)
- Total funding: $163.3M
- Biggest deal: Flutterwave ($35M) — Payment Infrastructure
- Other notable deals: 54gene ($15M HealthTech), TradeDepot ($10M), KudaBank ($10M)
- Average deal: $2.3M (-52% drop due to pandemic uncertainty)
- Key milestone: More deals than 2018, but smaller sizes. Investors cautious.
2021: THE BOOM YEAR (125 deals) 🚀
- Total funding: $1.48B
- Biggest deal: OPay ($400M) — Neobanking Series C ← BIGGEST DEAL EVER
- Other mega-deals: Flutterwave ($170M), AFEX ($115M AgriTech), TradeDepot ($110M), PalmPay ($100M)
- Average deal: $12.9M (+461% from 2020!)
- Key milestones:
- First $1B+ year
- 125 deals = PEAK DEAL COUNT
- Global tech boom
- Tiger Global aggressive in Africa
This was the peak. It wouldn’t last.
2022: Mega-Round Consolidation (50 deals)
- Total funding: $1.13B
- Biggest deal: Flutterwave ($250M) — Unicorn valuation ($3B)
- Other mega-deals: Moove ($182M), AFEX ($175M), Interswitch ($110M), ThriveAgric ($56M)
- Average deal: $23.1M (+79% from 2021) ← PEAK AVERAGE DEAL SIZE
- Key milestone: Fewer deals but MUCH larger sizes = late-stage consolidation
2023: THE CRASH (40 deals) 💥
- Total funding: $160.6M
- Biggest deal: LemFi ($33M) — Cross-border payments
- Other notable deals: Helium Health ($30M), FairMoney ($30M), Rensource Energy ($15M)
- Average deal: $5.0M (-78% from 2022!)
- Key milestones:
- Deal count collapsed 68%
- Funding dropped 86%
- Global tech winter
- SVB collapse
- VC pullback
The crash was brutal.
2024: Bottoming Out (44 deals)
- Total funding: $254.1M
- Biggest deal: Moniepoint ($110M) — Neobanking dominance
- Other notable deals: Yellow Card ($33M), Beacon Power Services ($30M CleanTech), Watt Renewable ($15M)
- Average deal: $6.9M (+38% recovery from 2023)
- Key milestone: Green shoots of recovery. Mega-rounds return.
2025: Recovery Begins (29 deals to date)
- Total funding: $419.8M
- Biggest deal: Moniepoint ($200M) — Another mega-round
- Other notable deals: LemFi ($53M), Stitches Africa ($50M Fashion), Kredete ($22M), Gigmile ($21M)
- Average deal: $14.5M (+110% from 2024)
- Key milestone: Deal sizes approaching 2021–2022 levels, but deal count still low
The Pattern:
→ 2018–2019: Foundation era (72–93 deals, $1.7–4.8M average)
→ 2020: COVID pause (75 deals, $2.3M average)
→ 2021: THE BOOM (125 deals, $12.9M average) — PEAK DEAL COUNT
→ 2022: Mega-round consolidation (50 deals, $23.1M average) — PEAK DEAL SIZE
→ 2023: THE CRASH (40 deals, $5.0M average) — 68% deal count drop, 86% funding drop
→ 2024–2025: Recovery (29–44 deals, $6.9–14.5M average) — Deal sizes recovering faster than volume
Total verified deals (2018–2025): 528 ✅
🎯 The Investment Matrix: Where Smart Money Goes
This is the most important chart.
I mapped every sector by Survival Rate (Y-axis) vs Follow-On Funding Rate (X-axis).
🟢 Top-Right Quadrant (GREEN — Best Bets):
- CleanTech: 90% survival, 70% follow-on
- HealthTech: 82% survival, 63% follow-on
- HRTech: 80% survival, 60% follow-on
These are the capital-efficient winners.
🟠 Middle Quadrant (ORANGE — Moderate Risk):
- Fintech: 73% survival, 40% follow-on (overcrowded, capital-intensive)
- EdTech: 70% survival, 39% follow-on
- Digital Commerce: 67% survival, 36% follow-on
🔴 Bottom-Left Quadrant (RED — High Risk):
- AgriTech: 50% survival, 50% follow-on (WORST position)
- B2B Enterprise SaaS: 63% survival, 22% follow-on (LOWEST follow-on rate)
The Fintech Paradox:
Fintech captured 64% of all funding but has the WORST follow-on rate (40%) among major sectors.
Why?
- Overcrowding (106 companies)
- Commoditization
- High capital requirements
- Investor fatigue
What This Means For You
After analyzing $4.17B across 293 companies, here’s what actually matters.
What Works (80–100% Survival):
- B2B SaaS with regulatory tailwinds (HR, RegTech, School Management)
- Essential infrastructure (Payments, Pharma Supply Chain, FMCG Distribution)
- Recurring revenue models (Energy-as-a-Service, Subscriptions)
- Capital-light tech plays (Coding Bootcamps with ISAs)
What Doesn’t (0–33% Survival):
- Consumer lending without collections infrastructure
- Agricultural crowdfunding platforms
- Student financing products
- Hardware with long R&D cycles (Genomics, Medical Devices)
- Loyalty/rewards programs
Pivot Playbook:
- B2C → B2B works
- Sector pivots work (Fintech → CleanTech)
- Product expansion works when you own distribution
- Don’t pivot WITHIN failing categories
Infrastructure plays > Consumer apps consistently
Payment infrastructure = proven acquisition target (Paystack $200M)
key take away:
- Regulatory frameworks create or destroy subsectors (RegTech 100% due to CBN KYC)
- Fix collections infrastructure to enable lending (currently 0–58% survival)
- Strengthen CleanTech incentives (already 90% survival, can grow sector)
- Support B2B infrastructure over consumer apps for economic impact
Explore the Data Yourself
I built 3 interactive Tableau dashboards with:
- Every funding round (528 deals)
- Every company outcome (293 companies)
- Survival rates by subsector (72 subsectors)
- Year-over-year funding trends
- Investment matrix by sector
Filter by sector, subsector, or funding stage. See which business models actually work.
https://public.tableau.com/views/NIGERIANSTARTUPECOSYSTEMANALYSIS20182025/HOME?:language=en-US&publish=yes&:sid=&:redirect=auth&:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_link
The Bottom Line
Sector < Subsector < Business Model
The survivors aren’t lucky. They’re predictable.
They chose:
- B2B over B2C
- Essential over nice-to-have
- Recurring over one-time
- Infrastructure over consumer apps
The data doesn’t lie.
The Nigerian Startup Ecosystem Deep Dive: $4.17B | 293 Companies | 528 Deals was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.