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Digital Africa Launches $58M Seed Fund Targeting Overlooked African Markets

France-backed pan-African programme Digital Africa has officially launched the Digital Africa Seed Fund (DASF), a dedicated seed-stage vehicle targeting between €30 million and €50 million. The announcement was made at the Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi on 12 May 2026.

The fund will write cheques of between €300,000 and €2 million into roughly 30 technology startups across approximately 20 countries, with a deliberate focus on markets that remain largely ignored by private venture capital.

Digital Africa operates under Proparco, the private sector arm of Agence Française de Développement (AFD), alongside the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs and the European Union. Its existing pre-seed instrument, Fuzé, has backed more than 70 startups across 16 African countries since inception. The DASF is designed as a direct continuation of that work, moving portfolio companies up the financing ladder before they become eligible for Proparco’s Series A activity.

The fund lists six priority sectors: artificial intelligence, fintech, healthtech, climate tech, space and digital infrastructure. Geography-wise, Digital Africa’s existing Fuzé portfolio offers a useful reference point, with investments spanning Tunisia, Ghana, Cameroon, Tanzania, Côte d’Ivoire, Uganda and Morocco. The fund’s tilt toward Francophone markets is consistent with AFD Group’s mandate, and with France’s broader push to reframe its Africa engagement around economic relationships rather than security ones, following strained diplomatic ties across the Sahel.

Three institutional investors have confirmed interest: the European Commission through DG INTPA, the West African Development Bank (BOAD), and Proparco. Ticket sizes have not been disclosed.

For founders operating outside Africa’s four dominant startup hubs, the DASF represents one of the more systematically structured sources of seed capital on the continent. Whether it can execute across 20 markets simultaneously, and at larger cheque sizes than Fuzé managed, is the question its deployment record over the next three years will need to answer.

What do you think?

Grace Ashiru

Written by Grace Ashiru

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