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The Innovation Spark

Phundit raises funding to help Africans navigate personal financial emergencies.

by Staff Reporter
February 26, 2026
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Peter Tokor

Peter Tokor

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For years, the narrative of African fintech has been dominated by one word: Credit. From Nairobi to Lagos, rapid-approval loan apps have proliferated, promising to bridge the liquidity gap. But for many users, these apps have become a “debt trap” rather than a safety net.

Phundit, the Ghanaian fintech startup, has just closed an undisclosed funding round from Nubia Capital, one of the continent’s most active early-stage investors. Phundit isn’t just another digital lender; it is betting on a “savings-first” model to tackle a grim reality: most Africans are exactly one emergency away from poverty.

A Continent on Edge: One Shock From Poverty

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The data paints a stark picture of household fragility in Sub-Saharan Africa. According to the World Bank’s Global Findex, fewer than 50% of adults in the region believe they could handle an unexpected expense totalling just 5% of their annual income.

While the fintech boom has made it easier to borrow, it hasn’t made it easier to prepare. Only 13% of adults report using personal savings for emergencies; the rest rely on high-interest credit, selling off productive assets, or the unpredictable nature of informal networks.

Economists often refer to this phenomenon as being “one emergency away from poverty”, a reality where a hospital visit, emergency school fees, or an unexpected trip cost can destabilise a household’s financial footing almost instantly.

Bridging the Preparedness Gap

Phundit’s entry into the market signals a shift in how the founders—and investors like Nubia Capital—are thinking about financial health. Rather than reinforcing a dependence on short-term debt, Phundit’s platform is designed to invert the traditional micro-lending paradigm.

How Phundit’s model differs from the status quo:

  1. The “savings-first” gate: Unlike instant-credit apps, Phundit encourages users to hit a target for a dedicated emergency fund before they can unlock broader credit products.
  2. Yield-bearing safety nets: Instead of letting cash sit idle, deposits are channelled into regulated instruments, allowing users to earn returns while they build their buffer.
  3. Behavioural nudges: The app uses coaching, reminders, and “gamified” rewards to turn the chore of saving into a disciplined habit.

With the reported funding, Phundit is positioning itself at the intersection of behavioural finance, digital savings, and financial health, a sector that could reshape how millions of Africans think about money, risk, and resilience.

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