If you’re wondering whether the momentum from 2025 has carried over into the new year, the numbers have given us a clear answer.
February 2026 has officially recorded the third-highest funding total for any February since 2019. With $361 million raised in disclosed deals alone, this month was only outperformed by the “mega-deal” peaks of 2023 and 2022.
The 2026 Headstart: January & February Combined
The first two months of tec2026 have already outpaced the start of 2025. This early-year surge suggests a strong appetite from investors despite global caution.
- Jan-Feb 2025 Total: $409M
- Jan-Feb 2026 Total: $575M
To see how this year stacks up against history, here is the February funding breakdown:
- 2023: $700M
- 2022: $647M
- 2026: $361M
- 2024: $217M
- 2020: $212M
- 2021: $178M
- 2019: $31M
The Rise of Logistics & Transport
In January, Fintech led the charge with big rounds from valU and NowPay. However, February saw a major shift. Logistics & Transport and Energy & Water took the lead this month, driven by a massive demand for sustainable infrastructure and mobility.
Africa’s Funded Startups in February 2026

The Big Checks: Who Led the Deals?
Last month, we tracked 28 deals in total, including 25 disclosed rounds and 3 undisclosed deals (Yongeza Capital, Kenai, and Affinity Africa). Here are the investors who championed the largest checks:
- Solar Africa ($94M): The clean-tech leader secured debt funding led by Rand Merchant Bank and Investec.
- Spiro ($57M total): The e-mobility firm secured two major debt rounds backed by Afreximbank, Nithio, and the Africa Go Green Fund.
- Breadfast ($50M): This e-commerce giant raised a Pre-Series C from a heavy-hitting group including Mubadala, IFC, Y Combinator, and Novastar Ventures.
- GoCab ($45M): Their hybrid round included equity from E3 Capital and JANNGO Capital, plus significant debt.
- Terra Industries ($22M): The defense-tech startup was backed by Lux Capital, 8VC, and even angel investor Jared Leto.
The Climate Tech Inflection Point
A major trend emerging in Jan-Feb 2026 is the dominance of Climatetech. While most tech deals are traditionally equity-based, we are seeing a massive shift toward debt funding in this sector.
Why? Climatetech startups like Solar Africa and Spiro are infrastructure-heavy. Debt allows these companies to scale their hardware (such as solar panels and electric bikes) without giving up too much ownership (equity). It signals a move toward more “defensible” and asset-backed business models in Africa.
Introducing: The Intelligence Series
Conversations shape ecosystems. For years, we’ve brought together the builders, investors, and decision-makers shaping Africa’s tech landscape.
Now, we’re excited to launch The Intelligence Series, a live event series designed to break down the stories behind the numbers.
Climatetech funding crossed the $1B mark again in 2025, even as broader venture capital stayed cautious. Is this a structural shift or a temporary rotation?
Join Adedayo Ojo (Associate Consultant, TechCabal Insights) and Eghosa Omoigui (Founder and Managing Partner, EchoVC Partners) as they unpack what the data reveals.
- When: Tomorrow, Thursday, March 5th
- Time: 4 PM
- Where: LinkedIn Live @TechCabal Insights

[Set a Reminder for the LinkedIn Live Here]
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