Global digital payments giant Visa has opened applications for the fifth cohort of its Africa Fintech Accelerator. The program, now in its second year, supports early-stage startups in scaling their fintech solutions across the continent, offering mentorship, technical training, and investor exposure.
Alongside this announcement, Visa revealed the 22 startups selected for the fourth cohort. The new batch includes companies from 12 countries, with a noticeable presence from North Africa. Egypt and Morocco, in particular, continue to emerge as key innovation hubs in the region’s fintech landscape.
From Egypt, two companies were selected. Flend is working to close the financing gap for small and medium-sized businesses. It operates as a non-bank financial institution, using data-driven methods to assess creditworthiness and distribute loans. The other startup, MNZL, focuses on expanding access to consumer credit. It enables Egyptians to unlock financing using existing assets like homes or vehicles as collateral.
Morocco also contributed two startups to the new group. Hsabati helps businesses manage operations and track performance, generating data that banks can use to assess risk and offer financing. Woliz is building a fintech ecosystem aimed at transforming informal nano-stores into digital hubs. Its tools include loyalty programs, digital payments, and AI-based inventory systems.
These startups represent different slices of the North African economy but share a common goal: using technology to formalise and expand financial access. Their inclusion in the accelerator reflects both their potential and a broader regional push toward digital transformation.
Outside North Africa, the rest of the cohort includes startups from 10 other African countries, including Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Uganda, Botswana, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Their solutions target everything from AI-enabled payments and payroll services to stablecoin liquidity, social commerce, and education financing.
The 22 Startups in Cohort 4:
- BigDot.ai (Zimbabwe) – Digitising SMEs with blockchain-powered checkouts and financial tools.
- ChatCash (Zimbabwe) – AI-powered, multilingual payments through messaging apps.
- Credify Africa (Uganda) – Closing the trade finance gap for importers.
- Flend (Egypt) – Data-driven SME financing for North Africa.
- Hsabati (Morocco) – Business operations and finance scoring for better bank access.
- IPT Africa (Mauritius) – Cross-border payroll and bulk payments.
- Lemonade Payments (Kenya) – Blockchain-based white-label wallets.
- Maishapay (DRC) – All-in-one B2B payments and payroll.
- MNZL (Egypt) – Asset-backed consumer lending.
- Motito (Ghana) – Marketplace for alternative asset financing.
- Muda (Kenya) – Stablecoin-powered cross-border payments.
- mystocks.africa (Botswana) – Pan-African stock trading simplified.
- OKO Finance Ltd (Ivory Coast) – Automated climate insurance for farmers.
- PressPayNg (Nigeria) – Fintech platform for education financing.
- Sevi (Kenya) – B2B payments in offline value chains.
- Shiga Digital Inc (Nigeria) – Decentralised financial access for Africa.
- ShopOkoa (Kenya) – AI-powered SME credit and cashflow tools.
- Startbutton (Nigeria) – Helps businesses expand across Africa with local currency payments.
- Twiva (Kenya) – Social commerce driven by influencers.
- Vittas (Nigeria) – Financing and payments for healthcare providers.
- Woliz (Morocco) – Turns nano-stores into digital hubs.
- Zazu (South Africa) – A neobank tailored for African SMBs.
The accelerator offers more than mentorship. It delivers hands-on training, deep ecosystem connections, funding opportunities, and the chance to pitch at a high-stakes Demo Day in front of top investors, partners, and ecosystem leaders.
Visa’s accelerator program runs for 12 weeks before the in-person demo day, where founders pitch to investors, industry stakeholders, and potential partners.
Companies in earlier cohorts have seen significant benefits. Since the program launched in 2023, 64 startups have participated. Together, they have raised more than USD 55 M and added over USD 3 M in revenue during the course of the program.
This effort is part of Visa’s broader commitment to Africa’s digital future. The company has pledged to invest USD 1 B in the continent by 2027, with a focus on infrastructure, innovation, and access. The accelerator is one piece of that strategy, aimed at giving early-stage companies the tools and connections to scale.
Cohort 5 is open to startups operating in Africa with solutions in payments, lending, banking, and related services. Applications close on August 15.


