Arab News
Arab news, Wed, May 07, 2025 | Dhu al-Qadah 9, 1446
Saudi Arabia leads MENA startup funding in April with $158.5m
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia led startup funding across the
Middle East and North Africa in April 2025, attracting $158.5 million across
eight deals — accounting for more than two-thirds of the region’s total
investment for the month.
The Kingdom’s dominant performance was largely
driven by iMENA Group’s $135 million pre-initial public offering round, placing
it ahead of the UAE, which followed with $62 million raised across nine
startups.
In total, MENA startups secured $228.4 million in
April through 26 deals, marking a 105 percent increase from March and nearly
triple the amount raised in April 2024, according to Wamda’s monthly report.
Notably, the month’s funding activity featured no
debt financing.
“Interestingly, the absence of debt-financed deals
in April highlights growing investor confidence in equity-based funding — a
trend reflecting a healthier capital environment,” the report stated.
Morocco ranked third regionally, raising $4
million across two startups, while Egypt lagged behind with just $1.5 million
secured by four companies.
Early-stage ventures led in deal volume, bringing
in $49 million through 20 transactions. Late-stage activity was concentrated
entirely in iMENA’s pre-IPO round.
By sector, fintech remained the top draw for
investors, attracting $44 million across seven transactions. Traveltech also
gained momentum, driven by HRA Experience’s deal, while e-commerce startups
raised $2.5 million across three deals.
Software-as-a-service ventures made a comeback
after a quiet first quarter, securing $1.8 million from three transactions.
In terms of business models, business-to-business
startups dominated, raising $180 million across 12 deals.
Business-to-consumer ventures followed with $43
million from seven transactions, while six companies operating both B2B and B2C
models accounted for the rest of the disclosed funding.
Gender disparities in startup funding persisted in
April. Female-led startups secured less than $500,000 in total, while
male-founded ventures captured 97 percent of all disclosed capital. Startups
co-founded by men and women raised an additional $6.5 million.