Live Market

MICRO MARKET INTELLIGENCE

City & District Hubs

Country guides live under their own macroeconomic section. This hub maps the sub-national terrain—giving you tighter, operational layers across Nairobi, Lagos, Cape Town, and other critical commercial hubs where density is actively built.

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15
Cities
9
Districts
6
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City ecosystems

The city hubs where operator networks, funding density, and commercial momentum are concentrated.

Lagos 🇳🇬

city huboperatorsdensity
City ecosystemWest Africa

Lagos is still the startup city many teams have to understand sooner or later. The pace is fast, the operator bench is deep, and competition tends to expose whether a company can really execute.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Unmatched founder density
  • › Extensive fintech ecosystem

Market Friction

  • › High operating costs
  • › Severe infrastructure friction
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Abuja 🇳🇬

policyenterpriseinstitutions
City ecosystemWest Africa

Abuja matters when institutions, regulated industries, public-sector buyers, and national-level relationships are part of the startup story.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Proximity to regulators
  • › Growing B2G opportunities

Market Friction

  • › Lower engineering density
  • › Slower deal velocity
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Port Harcourt 🇳🇬

industrylogisticsregional demand
City ecosystemWest Africa

Port Harcourt is worth tracking when logistics, industrial demand, energy workflows, and regional commerce shape the way a company operates.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Deep industrial and energy sector
  • › Uncontested regional market

Market Friction

  • › Security concerns
  • › Isolated from main tech capital
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Nairobi 🇰🇪

city huboperatorsEast Africa
City ecosystemEast Africa

Nairobi blends founder density, investor attention, and practical startup building in a way few African cities can match.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Unrivaled East African hub
  • › Deep mobile money penetration

Market Friction

  • › Funding often hyper-concentrated
  • › High talent competition
🇰🇪 KenyaOpen Data

Mombasa 🇰🇪

coastal tradelogisticsdistribution
City ecosystemEast Africa

Mombasa matters when trade, logistics, tourism-linked demand, and coastal distribution shape the commercial picture.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Major regional port and trade access
  • › Strong tourism industry

Market Friction

  • › Brain drain to Nairobi
  • › Slower tech adoption
🇰🇪 KenyaOpen Data

Cape Town 🇿🇦

founder densitysoftwareglobal-facing
City ecosystemSouthern Africa

Cape Town remains one of the most visible startup cities on the continent, with a strong founder base, investor attention, and a healthy mix of software and consumer stories.

Core Tailwinds

  • › World-class lifestyle attracts global talent
  • › Mature software ecosystem

Market Friction

  • › Geographically isolated from rest of Africa
  • › Cost of living
🇿🇦 South AfricaOpen Data

Pretoria 🇿🇦

institutionsenterpriseresearch
City ecosystemSouthern Africa

Pretoria matters when the market story leans toward institutions, enterprise buyers, research, and a more operational view of South African startup activity.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Strong institutional and research base
  • › Government adjacency

Market Friction

  • › Slower startup velocity vs Cape Town
  • › Conservative risk appetite
🇿🇦 South AfricaOpen Data

Addis Ababa 🇪🇹

capital cityemerging marketexecution
City ecosystemEast Africa

Addis Ababa is the clearest city lens into Ethiopia's startup market and a strong place to watch operational ambition meet real local complexity.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Massive centralized market access
  • › Rapidly modernizing telecom

Market Friction

  • › Strict capital controls
  • › Bureaucratic hurdles
🇪🇹 EthiopiaOpen Data

Douala 🇨🇲

trade citycommerceCentral Africa
City ecosystemCentral Africa

Douala is worth watching when trade, payments, logistics, and commercial activity matter more than startup hype.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Key Central African economic hub
  • › Strong cross-border trade

Market Friction

  • › Underdeveloped early-stage VC
  • › Infrastructure deficits
🇨🇲 CameroonOpen Data

District guides

The hyper-local neighborhood and business-district environments where operators cluster.

Ikeja 🇳🇬

business districtoperationssoftware
District viewWest Africa

Ikeja is one of the better windows into the practical operating side of Lagos, especially for software, services, and businesses built close to customers.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Strong industrial base
  • › Mainland affordability

Market Friction

  • › Heavy traffic congestion
  • › Fragmented tech hubs
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Yaba 🇳🇬

builder culturesoftwarecommunity
District viewWest Africa

Yaba has long been shorthand for builder energy in Lagos. It is a useful page when you want a tighter read on startup density, experimentation, and operator culture.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Historic tech ecosystem roots
  • › High student/academic density

Market Friction

  • › Exodus of established startups
  • › Aging infrastructure
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Victoria Island 🇳🇬

capitalcorporatesgo-to-market
District viewWest Africa

Victoria Island is usually relevant when capital, corporate access, partnerships, and polished go-to-market motions are part of the story.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Premium corporate access
  • › High concentration of capital

Market Friction

  • › Extremely high real estate costs
  • › Limited early-stage builder community
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Lekki 🇳🇬

growth corridorconsumercommerce
District viewWest Africa

Lekki is part of the Lagos startup picture people increasingly care about when tracking consumer products, new communities, and fast-moving commercial demand.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Fastest growing residential tech hub
  • › Modern infrastructure

Market Friction

  • › Gridlocked access to mainland
  • › High cost of living
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Ikoyi 🇳🇬

executive networkscapitalservices
District viewWest Africa

Ikoyi is a smaller but still important Lagos node when capital access, premium buyers, and executive networks are part of the equation.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Executive and investor density
  • › Premium enterprise networking

Market Friction

  • › Prohibitively expensive
  • › Not a builder hub
🇳🇬 NigeriaOpen Data

Westlands 🇰🇪

ecosystem accesssoftwareoperators
District viewEast Africa

Westlands is one of the better neighborhood-level views into Nairobi's startup density, especially when meetings, operators, and ecosystem access matter.

Core Tailwinds

  • › Prime expat and corporate access
  • › Excellent amenities

Market Friction

  • › High operational costs
  • › Traffic congestion
🇰🇪 KenyaOpen Data

How to use the location hub

Use this hub when you already know the country and want the tighter city or district layer that shapes how companies actually operate.

  1. 01

    Open a city page when you want the clearest ecosystem-level view inside a market.

  2. 02

    Use district pages when a single city is still too broad for the kind of research you are doing.

  3. 03

    Move back to country guides when you need a wider market map again.

Location hub FAQs

Why browse by location instead of starting with the full startup directory?

Because most serious research starts with geography. Location pages keep market context intact, which makes it much easier to see who is building, where the density sits, and which sectors keep showing up.

What is the difference between a country page and a city page?

Country pages live under the country guides. This hub is for city and district pages, which give you a tighter operating view of where founder density, partnerships, and commercial activity are clustering.

How should I use these pages for sourcing or diligence?

Start with the city or district that matters, open the strongest company profiles, then cross-check what you find against investor, people, and sector pages to pressure-test the shortlist.