Digital Africa has launched a €30 million seed-stage fund targeting early-growth startups across the continent, seeking to address a critical funding gap that continues to stall promising ventures before they reach scale.
The DA Seed Fund (DASF), with a hard cap of €50 million and a 10-year investment horizon, will back about 30 companies in 20 African countries, writing average initial checks of €300,000, according to the organization. The fund will focus on startups that have moved beyond the idea stage and are beginning to demonstrate early traction.
The initiative comes as African startups face a persistent “missing middle” in financing—where companies are too advanced for pre-seed backing but not yet mature enough to attract larger institutional rounds.
“Too many promising companies quietly fail in this phase,” Digital Africa said in a statement, pointing to limited capital and a lack of structured support as key constraints.
The fund builds on Fuzé, Digital Africa’s pre-seed investment vehicle, which has deployed €10 million in tickets of between €20,000 and €100,000 across tech-enabled startups. While Fuzé helped validate the depth of entrepreneurial talent on the continent, it also highlighted the bottleneck that emerges once startups reach the minimum viable product (MVP) stage.
DASF is designed to act as a bridge, combining capital with operational support aimed at reducing execution risk. Investments will be tied to milestones such as product development, market expansion, hiring, and regulatory compliance—factors seen as essential to unlocking Series A funding.
The model reflects a growing view among investors that returns in African early-stage ventures depend less on rapid capital deployment and more on disciplined company building.
A key feature of the strategy is pipeline continuity. Startups graduating from Fuzé enter the seed fund with prior screening and performance data, helping reduce information gaps that often deter investors in emerging markets.
The broader ecosystem links pre-seed, seed, and later-stage capital through partnerships with institutions including Proparco, offering founders a more structured pathway from concept to regional scale.
DASF will target tech-enabled businesses with strong founding teams, early user adoption, and the potential for high growth and measurable impact. Applications are open through a process that includes eligibility screening, due diligence, and investment committee approval.
The launch comes amid renewed focus on capital efficiency across Africa’s startup ecosystem, as funding has become more selective following a period of rapid growth.
For investors, Digital Africa says the fund offers exposure to a high-growth market with built-in risk mitigation. For founders, it represents a rare attempt to smooth one of the ecosystem’s most difficult transitions.
African startups are tackling large, underserved markets, but often lack appropriately timed financing. DASF’s success may depend on whether it can convert early promise into scalable businesses—an outcome that has remained elusive for many in the region.

