North Africa has no shortage of entrepreneurial talent, but female founders are often underrepresented when it comes to visibility and funding. However, a wave of women-led startups are quietly but powerfully rewriting the rules. They’re tackling entrenched problems in health, fashion, energy, tourism, and tech, and they’re scaling solutions that make life better for millions.
But the path is rough, and the numbers reveal just how steep the climb is. Despite making up nearly half the population, women-led startups continue to receive only a sliver of investment capital. In 2023, female-led companies across the wider Middle East and North Africa attracted less than 1% of total venture funding. That number doesn’t reflect a lack of ideas or talent; it reflects systemic blind spots in how capital is allocated.
And still, women across North Africa are building businesses that matter. They’re tackling challenges that touch daily life, whether it’s access to affordable medicine, clean water, or renewable energy. What’s striking is how often these businesses combine commercial potential with social impact, proving that profitability and purpose don’t have to be opposites.
Below are eight startups led by women that are breaking the mold, scaling smart solutions, and reshaping North Africa’s economic and social future.
1. Dabchy (Tunisia)
Founded by Ameni Mansouri in 2016, Dabchy started as a small community of women swapping clothes online. It has since become one of North Africa’s largest fashion resale marketplaces. Mansouri and her team tapped into a growing hunger for affordable, sustainable fashion and turned it into a thriving digital marketplace that connects buyers and sellers seamlessly.
The traction attracted early seed funding in 2019, and in 2025, Dabchy closed a seven-figure pre-Series A round led by Janngo Capital, joined by Village Capital and Renew Capital. The capital is being used to expand categories beyond clothing, including books and home goods, and to accelerate expansion into Egypt. By embedding trust and community into every transaction, Dabchy has carved out a space that competitors struggle to replicate, while its fundraising success shows growing investor confidence in North Africa’s circular economy.
With hundreds of thousands of users and backing from regional investors, Dabchy has proven that the circular economy can scale in MENA.
2. Almouneer (Egypt)
Managing chronic diseases like diabetes and obesity is one of Egypt’s biggest health challenges, with millions of patients requiring long-term care. In 2017, Dr. Noha Khater and Dr. Rania Kadry, both ophthalmologists specializing in diabetic eye disease, founded Almouneer to tackle this head-on. Their digital health platform, DRU, allows patients to track their conditions, connect with doctors, and access lifestyle coaching tailored to chronic illness management.
The startup’s impact was clear early on. Almouneer had served more than 120,000 patients by 2023. But what really pushed it into the spotlight was its USD 3.6 M seed round in October 2023, led by Dubai-based Global Ventures with participation from Proparco and Wrightwood Investments. The raise was one of the largest ever seed rounds for a female-led healthtech startup in the Middle East and North Africa, validating both the founders’ medical expertise and the business model’s scalability.
With the funding, Almouneer is expanding its services to cover obesity management and preventive healthcare, while also strengthening AI-driven tools for patient monitoring.
3. Chefaa (Egypt)
Doctors often say patients don’t just need medicine; they need adherence and access. That’s exactly what Dr. Rasha Rady and Doaa Aref deliver through Chefaa, a patient-centric, AI-powered & GPS-enabled platform, designing services to improve patients’ compliance and adherence
The founders blend medical expertise with tech execution, making it easier for patients to order prescriptions, schedule recurring deliveries, and access health advice, all from a smartphone.
With millions of Egyptians increasingly relying on smartphones, the platform rapidly grew to over a million active users. By late 2023, investors had taken note. Chefaa raised USD 5.25 M in a round co-led by South Africa’s Newtown Partners and Japan’s Global Brain, capital earmarked for expansion into Saudi Arabia.
With pharmacies fragmented and a growing demand for regular refills from patients with chronic diseases, Chefaa is bridging that gap with logistics and AI-driven reminders. Today, Chefaa is active in multiple Saudi cities, proving that its model can scale regionally while keeping patients at the center.
4. MotherBeing / Daleela (Egypt)
In a region where reproductive health is often a reserved subject, Nour Emam has built MotherBeing, a health assistant service, into a trusted voice. It began as content and workshops on sexual and reproductive health and has grown into a femtech platform that combines education, community, and digital health services. Its mission is to provide women with accurate information, safe spaces for discussion, and digital health tools tailored to reproductive and sexual health
The platform has seen millions engage with its content online and recently raised USD 200 K in pre-seed funding from Madica’s investment program in February. It is now evolving into AI-powered tools and discreet healthcare services for women. By normalizing conversations that were once hidden, Emam has created both social impact and a scalable product that addresses a huge underserved market.
As it expands its telehealth services and AI-driven tools, Emam is charting a path where cultural change and digital health innovation intersect.
5. Instapower (Tunisia)
In rural areas where electricity is scarce, Ilhem Nemri and her team at Instapower designed a simple yet transformative device: a portable power box that converts fire into usable electricity. It’s a frugal innovation built for families who still cook on open flames but need to charge phones, light their homes, and power basic devices.
The Tunisian startup specializing in Appliances, Electrical, and Electronics Manufacturing, known for its innovative charging devices
Instapower has won regional innovation prizes and gained early grant funding to pilot its technology in rural communities. While it hasn’t raised venture capital yet, its recognition from competitions is helping to build credibility for larger funding in the future.
Hardware startups in Africa often face uphill battles with manufacturing and distribution, but Instapower’s design, low-cost, low-maintenance, high-utility makes it a strong candidate for scale.
6. Aishore (Morocco)
Founded in 2023 by Malika Ahmidouch, Aishore is Morocco’s answer to the global demand for AI services. With a team of engineers specializing in data platforms and embedded AI systems, Aishore is building a hub for AI services and data engineering, connecting Moroccan talent with global enterprise clients.
Ahmidouch brings a finance and operations background to the table. Though still young, Aishore has already secured contracts with international clients and is growing its team rapidly. Revenue estimates place it in the million-dirham range, signaling early traction.
While the company hasn’t announced formal fundraising yet, it is gaining credibility with investors as Morocco strengthens its reputation for bilingual, cost-effective, and skilled tech talent. Ahmidouch’s ambition is clear: to turn Casablanca into a gateway for African AI expertise feeding European and global markets.
7. Green WaTech (Morocco)
Dr. Salma Bougarrani co-founded Green WaTech in 2018 with the aim of tackling one of Morocco’s most urgent problems: wastewater treatment in underserved rural areas. Her PhD in water treatment shaped a solution that relies on simple soil and gravel layers rather than costly chemicals or electricity. The result is a system that filters wastewater at low cost, produces reusable water, and lasts for decades with minimal upkeep.
The Moroccan startup focuses on providing eco-friendly, decentralized water treatment solutions to communities, particularly in rural areas.
The impact has been profound, treating more than 200 million liters of water and supporting food production in dozens of villages. International recognition soon followed: in 2024, Bougarrani won the Cartier Women’s Initiative Prize, securing USD 100 K, and in 2025, Green WaTech took home USD 250 K as runner-up in the Africa’s Business Heroes competition. Those grants have allowed the company to expand installations across Morocco, scaling a model that could be replicated across Africa.
8. Ginni AI (Egypt)
Ginni AI is a cutting-edge sales enablement platform founded by Mai Medhat that uses artificial intelligence to streamline and revolutionize enterprise deal-making. This technology is designed to equip sales teams with the tools they need to be more efficient, enabling them to close deals faster and more effectively by automating key tasks and providing data-driven insights.
The company’s co-founder Mai is one of North Africa’s few female founders with a tech exit under her belt. She initially built Eventtus, a leading event engagement app, scaled it across 30+ countries, and sold it to Bevy in 2021. She went on to launch Ginni AI, a sales enablement platform using artificial intelligence to streamline enterprise deal-making.
While still in early stages, Medhat’s fundraising record and successful exit make her one of the region’s most credible entrepreneurs. Her journey from Cairo to Silicon Valley boardrooms signals to investors and founders alike that women-led startups from North Africa can build, scale, and exit at international levels.
These eight startups may span very different industries—clean energy, health, AI, hospitality, sales, but they share common DNA: founders with deep expertise, products that solve real pain points, and a mix of commercial and social impact.
They’re scaling marketplaces, pioneering femtech, preserving culture, and creating jobs in cutting-edge fields. And they’re led by women who are not just participating in North Africa’s startup story—they’re writing whole new chapters.


