Visa, a global digital payments firm, has announced the startups shortlisted from across Africa to participate in the second cohort of its Africa Fintech Accelerator program.

As part of Visa’s work to unlock financial innovation across the continent, the biannual program offers 12 weeks of 1:1 mentorship and personalized training, providing seed to series A startups with exclusive opportunities to access funding, development, and resources.

Cohort 2 startups operate across 28 African countries, a 55% increase from Cohort 1 where the representatives operated across 18 countries. 65% of them feature female leadership, rising from 43% in the inaugural edition.

The selected startups offer a range of solutions, such as neo-banking, merchant payments, credit scoring, risk and identity management, embedded finance, social commerce, escrow services, and more. They aim to address the challenges and opportunities in the African fintech landscape, such as financial inclusion, access to credit, cross-border payments, and
digital transformation.

Aida Diarra, Vice President, and Head of Sub-Saharan Africa at Visa remarked: “At Visa, we believe in uplifting innovation while driving access and inclusion across the financial ecosystem.

Today, we are proud to say that our second cohort of Accelerator participants represents more than 50% of countries across Africa, up from a third during our first cohort. Not only that–but women are in leadership roles across most of these cutting-edge startups. We have a robust, diverse selection of innovators seeking to shape the future of commerce and finance – and Visa is happy to help them take the next step to where they need to be.”

The Accelerator program, launched in June 2023, is reflective of Visa’s ongoing efforts to help uplift the digital economy in Africa, including a pledge to invest $1 billion in the continent by 2027 to help revolutionize the payments ecosystem.

Visa
From left: Peach Payments co-founder and CEO Rahul Jain, Visa’s Aida Diarra, National Bank of Rwanda’s Christian Kajeneri, Visa’s Lesego Charlie and KCB Group CEO Paul Russo.

The 12-week virtual Accelerator program will conclude with an in-person Demo Day, where startups will have the opportunity to pitch their innovations to key ecosystem players, funding partners, angel investors, and venture capitalists, enabling them to take small steps towards unlocking their full potential.

The program builds on the success of the first cohort, who graduated in February 2024 with an investor week in Nairobi that saw the participation of more than 250 attendees including banking and fintech partners, investors, and venture capital firms. The first cohort startups have since reported positive outcomes from the program, such as increased user growth, product enhancements, funding opportunities, and strategic partnerships with Visa and other industry players.

Dolapo Adejuyigbe, Co-founder and Co-CEO of Traction, a Nigerian startup, and developer of the Traction App, a one stop platform for small businesses to accept payments, run their businesses and access capital for growth, who participated in the first cohort, commented:

“The Visa Accelerator Program has been very engaging infused with practical learnings across all parameters required to build and scale our business. We have also been able to involve some of our team members in these programs, which we believe will expedite our execution path. Grateful to also be part of a community of founders who are looking for similar outcomes for their startups, acting as peer mentors through the process.

Lastly, we are very excited on the initiatives we are partnering with Visa on, some of which we have started executing even during the accelerator program.”

  1. Chapa – Ethiopia – merchant solutions
  2. CheckUps Medical Hub – Kenya – embedded finance (health)
  3. AzamPay – Tanzania – B2B marketplace
  4. Beem– Tanzania – social commerce
  5. Bizao – Ivory Coast – merchant payments solution
  6. Hub2 – Ivory Coast – enabler infrastructure
  7. Iwomi Technologies – Cameroon – money movement
  8. Proboutik – Cameroon – merchant payments solution
  9. Vaultpay – Democratic Republic of Congo – merchant payments solution
  10. Aku – Nigeria – neo-banking
  11. Cleva – Nigeria – money movement
  12. Curacel – Nigeria – insurance management
  13. E-doc Online – Nigeria – open banking
  14. Raenest – Nigeria – money movement
  15. Bridgecard – Nigeria – enabler infrastructure

Musa Suleiman
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