North Africa’s tech ecosystem is booming at an impressive, accelerating pace. Once considered peripheral to the booming startup scenes of Lagos or Nairobi, cities like Cairo, Tunis, Casablanca, and Algiers have vaulted onto the global stage as centers of digital innovation and venture capital activity.
According to the African Tech Startups Funding Report, the region’s share of total African startup investment has more than doubled, climbing from just 9% in 2019 to over 20% of all continental capital by 2024, a clear sign that the Maghreb and Egypt are no longer emerging players, but rising powers.
While venture capital is growing in the region, most VC firms still focus on startups with proven traction or revenue. That leaves a critical gap at the idea and pre-seed stages, where founders need the most support and the least capital.
Plugging this gap is a network of strategic incubators and accelerators. They are the region’s true risk-takers that have fundamentally redefined what it means to build a startup in North Africa. They are providing founders with the early capital, infrastructure, and mentorship that once seemed out of reach, and in doing so, they’re cementing the region’s future as a global innovation hub.
1. Flat6Labs Tunis (Tunisia)
Based in Tunis and connected to a wider MENA network, Flat6Labs Tunis catalyzes tech startups across Francophone Africa and beyond. While its cohorts are sector-agnostic, there is strong representation in FinTech, EdTech and Cleantech.
Through the Anava Seed Fund, Flat6Labs provides seed funding of up to around USD 65 k in exchange for roughly 10-15% equity, and runs a four-month accelerator programme of mentorship, training and investor demo days. Alumni include startups such as SeekMake and Kaoun, which have gone on to raise follow-on funding and expand regionally.
Since launching in 2016, Flat6Labs Tunis has accelerated over 100 startups, which have collectively raised more than USD 15 M in verifiable follow-on capital. Its key differentiator is that it crucially bridges local Tunisian founders with regional and Gulf capital and markets, a link that many Tunisian entrepreneurs lack.
2. Technopark Maroc (Morocco)
Situated in Casablanca with additional campuses in Rabat, Tangier and Agadir, Technopark Maroc supports startups locally while projecting into pan-African ambitions.
The hub focuses on digital tech, green technology and industrial innovation. Unlike many commercial accelerators, it operates on an equity-free model (public-private partnership backed by national development funds), offering incubation and acceleration ranging from 6 months up to 2 years depending on the venture’s stage.
Notable alumni include ATLAN Space (AI-driven drones) and Deepecho (medical-imaging AI). Technopark has supported over 400 startups and created more than 5,000 jobs. Its unique edge lies in the scale of its ecosystem-infrastructure: it is a large-scale innovation campus that clusters startups, corporates and research institutions under one roof.
3. Startupbootcamp FinTech Cairo (Egypt)
In Cairo, this accelerator focuses exclusively on FinTech, including payments, lending, regtech and financial inclusion, serving the broader MENA region.
Each startup in the programme receives about USD 25 k seed funding for ~6% equity, plus significant in-kind services (mentorship, workspace).
The accelerator runs a three-month intensive programme culminating in a demo day. Alumni such as NowPay and Paynas have raised tens of millions in follow-on investment and expanded beyond Egypt.
To date, over 30 FinTech startups have graduated from the programme, collectively raising more than USD 60 M. What sets this programme apart is its deep integration with major financial institutions and regulators in Egypt, offering direct access to potential pilots and large bank infrastructure.
4. AUC Venture Lab (V‑Lab) (Egypt)
Housed at the American University in Cairo in Cairo, AUC V-Lab is Egypt’s first university-based accelerator and serves both the local market and broader MENA region. Its focus includes tech-enabled startups across FinTech, logistics, Ed-Tech, green economy and mobility.
The programme targets early-stage startups and runs a flagship four-month accelerator, along with FinTech-specific tracks. To date, the V-Lab has supported more than 375 startups, created over 12,000 jobs, and helped alumni raise over USD 356 M in total funding (the most current figure as of 2024).
Alumni include Swvl (which became Egypt’s first unicorn to list on Nasdaq), Klickit, and ElGameya. Its unique differentiator is its strong academic anchor (AUC), which de-risks deep-tech ventures by combining research, mentoring, and investment readiness within a globally connected university ecosystem.
5. Plug and Play Morocco (Morocco)
Part of the global innovation platform Plug and Play Tech Center (Silicon Valley-based), Plug and Play Morocco partners with Technopark and other local institutions to deliver acceleration programmes in Morocco with regional reach.
The sectors targeted include FinTech, HealthTech, AgriTech and Energy. One such programme offers an intensive three-month acceleration, open to early-stage founders with working MVPs and regional scaling ambition. Through the partnership, Moroccan startups gain access to Plug & Play’s global network of 550+ corporate partners and 30,000+ startups worldwide.
Over 120 startups have already been supported in Morocco, raising over USD 80 M and creating more than 900 skilled jobs. The differentiator here is the combination of local ecosystem infrastructure (Technopark) with a global acceleration network (Plug & Play) enabling Moroccan startups to plug into international markets.
6. ACT Tunisia (Tunisia)
Based in Tunisia and focused on catalysing scalable startups in the region, ACT Tunisia (through its growth programmes) targets sectors such as GreenTech, BioTech and Artificial Intelligence.
One of its programmes offers average investment tickets of EUR 750 k, along with tailored mentoring and international market support. The stage targeted is pre-seed to seed with international traction, and duration roughly spans acceleration to scale (timeline varies).
Its unique differentiator is the high investment ticket combined with sector focus (AI/BioTech) and strong international investor network, positioning itself as a bridge between Tunisian talent and global growth.
7. Falak Startups (Egypt)
Launched by Egypt Ventures under the Ministry of International Cooperation, Falak Startups combines acceleration with venture investment.
Operating out of Cairo, Falak Startups supports Egyptian entrepreneurs across sectors and focuses on seed to post-seed growth-stage companies. The programme, which has evolved into a hybrid VC-accelerator model, offers ticket sizes reportedly up to EGP 2 M (≈ USD 100 k – 130 k) in exchange for minority equity.
Its six-month program emphasizes growth strategy, fundraising readiness, and market scaling. Since inception, Falak has invested over EGP 424.2 M (USD 9 M) across more than 150 startups, one of the largest such portfolios in the region
What sets Falak apart is its deep governmental backing and investment mandate (rather than purely mentorship), giving Egyptian founders both scale capital and acceleration in one package.
8. H7 (HSeven) Ventures (Morocco)
Also known as HSeven, this Moroccan incubator runs the “Rise-Up” early-stage programme (6-month duration) and focuses on ultra-early-stage entrepreneurs — from idea to proof of concept.
The programme includes grants (“200 k DH” for the Idea track, “500 k DH” for the Re-Start track), design sprints, mentoring and coworking space. Alumni move toward their first contracts and seed funding.
Its unique point is its support of ultra-early-stage ventures (even pre-MVP) with non-dilutive capital, giving Moroccan founders a low-barrier entry into the ecosystem. The sector focus is broad (innovation-centric) and the reach is local Moroccan, with potential regional linkages.
9. LaStartupStation (Morocco)
Based in Casablanca, LaStartupStation works across 29 African countries via open-innovation and corporate-startup matching. The organization emphasizes open innovation, connecting large enterprises with agile startups to co-develop digital solutions.
It supports over 2,000 startups and has funded 64 startups, generated over USD 20 M in startup funding, and secured over USD 33 M in value creation between startups and corporates. The model emphasises bridging large institutions and emerging startups, democratizing innovation within public and private organisations. Its differentiator is its corporate & institutional embeddedness, it brings startups into large-scale transformation projects alongside major players, rather than just traditional mentorship.
10. IncubMe (Algeria)
Based in Algiers, IncubMe is a private incubator operating within Algeria but with a pan-African ambition (via its “Africa by IncubMe” initiative). It is one of Algeria’s flagship private incubator and one of the few with a pan-African outlook.
The program targets early-stage and idea-stage tech startups across sectors such as FinTech, AgriTech and clean energy. It runs incubation durations of six to eighteen months, selects ~20-30 projects annually at launch, and emphasises coaching, prototyping and network access.
While details of investment size and equity are less public, IncubMe offers financing opportunities, physical space, events and hackathons. The differentiator is that it is one of Algeria’s earliest private incubators, aiming to fill the gap in local ecosystem support and connect Algerian and African founders with investment and pan-African networks.
North Africa’s Innovation Engine
Together, these ten incubators and accelerators tell a story of transformation. From the private ingenuity of IncubMe to the government-backed infrastructure of Technopark Maroc, from Flat6Labs’ regional investment model to ACT Tunisia’s high-ticket ambition, each plays a distinct role in shaping North Africa’s innovation economy.
Across North Africa, these incubators and accelerators are doing more than launching startups, they’re laying the foundation for sustainable innovation economies. By providing early-stage capital, mentorship, and structured growth programs, they’re helping founders bridge the most fragile gap in the entrepreneurial journey, the one before venture capital even enters the room.


