As we prepare to launch the 2025 Ghana Startup and Innovation Ecosystem Report, we are sharing early insights with our readers. The report offers a comprehensive review of Ghana’s startup landscape—highlighting the successes, constraints, and structural shifts that defined the ecosystem over the past year
- The Total Funding Trend
Ghana’s funding trajectory in 2025 tells a story of stabilisation rather than collapse. Total startup funding reached $65 million across equity, debt, and grants—a sharp 50% decline from the $128 million rebound recorded in 2024. Deal activity, however, held steady, with 34 deals closed, up slightly from 31 the previous year.
Focusing solely on the headline figure, however, obscures a deeper structural shift. For the first time in the ecosystem’s history, debt overtook equity as the dominant source of capital, accounting for 60% of total funding. While equity investment fell by 71%, debt financing proved far more resilient, declining by just 12%. This marks a decisive move away from speculative growth capital toward models with clearer cash flows and repayment capacity.
- Industry Champions
Despite a challenging global funding environment, Ghana’s leading sectors adapted rather than retreated. In 2025, Fintech, Agriculture & Food, and Logistics & Mobility dominated capital allocation, together accounting for 84% of total funding.
- Fintech remained the backbone of the ecosystem, capturing 43% of total funding, although capital inflows to the sector declined by 43% year-on-year.
- Agriculture & Food—historically strong in deal volume rather than ticket size—raised $14 million, representing a 47% decline compared to the previous year.
- Logistics & Mobility stood out as the sole growth sector, recording a 35% increase in funding, reflecting sustained investor confidence in asset-backed and infrastructure-enabled business models.
- The Credentials Gap and the Network Premium
Beyond sectoral shifts, a persistent structural imbalance continues to shape capital outcomes: the credentials and network gap between foreign-educated and locally educated founders.
Locally educated entrepreneurs remained the backbone of startup activity, closing over 70% of all deals in 2025. Yet they captured only a minority share of total capital. Foreign-educated founders raised 2.6x more funding, despite representing a smaller share of the founder population.
This pattern suggests that investors continue to rely on credentialed trust, using elite international education and global networks as proxies for risk mitigation. The result is a two-speed ecosystem: one driven by local entrepreneurship at the deal level, and another where larger pools of capital remain gated by global credentials and network access.
These insights are only a snapshot of the deeper analysis in the 2025 Ghana Startup and Innovation Ecosystem Report. The full report will be released soon. Subscribe to our Substack to be the first to receive the report on launch day, along with exclusive data insights and ecosystem analysis delivered directly to your inbox.


