Delta40 has secured $20 million in funding to support its integrated Venture Studio and Fund, marking what it describes as Africa’s first institutional raise linking venture building with early-stage capital.
The milestone merges investment with hands-on studio support from experienced operators to help build and scale startups across the continent. Delta40 brings together 54 investors from 13 countries, including global institutions, high-net-worth individuals, development finance institutions (DFIs), family offices, and foundations.
The raise includes investors from across Africa to Silicon Valley, with 25 Founders participating to create what the company calls a “founders backing founders” ecosystem. Several founders have also invested their own capital into the studio to empower the next generation of African entrepreneurs building transformative and scalable ventures.
Delta40 initially launched its venture studio model in Kenya and has since expanded to Lagos, Nigeria. The expansion provides portfolio companies with direct, on-the-ground support as they scale across the continent. The organisation pioneered a Venture Studio and Fund model that combines early-stage capital with embedded product, fundraising, commercial, finance, legal, growth, and exit expertise.
Through this model, Delta40 partners with founders from idea to scale across energy and mobility, agriculture, and fintech sectors, with a goal to integrate AI across all sectors.
“Through Delta40, we’re building and scaling innovations that transform lives, economies, and planetary health across Africa, with solutions that can power and feed the world. What sets this model apart is our community of innovators, investors, and business leaders who provide hands-on support from idea to pan-African scale and impactful exits. Over 75% of our investors and team have built ventures in Africa, bringing deep experience, networks, and lessons from successful exits across the continent and beyond,” said Lyndsay Holley Handler, founder and CEO of Delta40.
As a venture studio, Delta40 invests initial checks ranging from $100,000 to $500,000 at the idea-to-Seed stage, with the potential for follow-on investment. Beyond providing capital, the team acts as a long-term extension of startup teams. It supports commercial growth and fundraising execution, including investor materials, financial modeling, strategy development, exit opportunities, and targeted introductions to help founders secure subsequent rounds of funding.
According to global benchmarks cited by the firm, venture studios help startups raise capital two times faster and achieve IPO and M&A exits 30 percent faster than traditional models. Additionally, venture capital funds that provide significant post-investment support have been shown to achieve 50 percent greater net internal rates of return.
Delta40 said it was designed to address persistent gaps in Africa’s innovation ecosystem. It noted that less than 2 percent of venture funding currently goes to female founders, and less than 30 percent goes to African founders. This is despite data showing that locally led ventures and diverse founding teams often generate stronger financial returns and outsized impact.
The company also pointed out that many ventures fail to reach scale or achieve an exit, often due to limited access to the right capital, technology, or talent. Its combined fund and venture studio model was built to support founders at the ideation stage, accelerate innovation and execution, and help grow resilient, scalable businesses across Africa.
The investor and strategic partner base includes institutional players such as the Soros Economic Development Fund, FMO, GIZ, Autodesk Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, Allan & Gill Gray Philanthropies, Livelihood Impact Fund, Small Foundation, Lemelson Foundation, Factor(E) Ventures, and Skoll Foundation. The raise also features strong African participation and on-the-ground champions.
Delta40 worked with global law firm Wilson Sonsini, which helped design the legal and financing structure for the model and also invested in the fund.
“Delta40 exemplifies the kind of bold, locally-led innovation that is essential to building inclusive economies and environmental resilience across Africa. At SEDF, we are proud to support visionary founders who are solving urgent challenges – and shaping a more just and sustainable future,” said Georgia Levenson Keohane, CEO of Soros Economic Development Fund.
Andrew Shaw, manager, Impact FMO, said the partnership aligns with FMO’s long-term strategy. “At FMO, market creation sits at the core of our 2030 strategy, tackling the systemic barriers that limit capital deployment and entrepreneurs’ access to the right finance to scale. Delta40’s venture studio model reflects this approach, pairing appropriate capital with hands-on support to help founders build resilient businesses across energy, food systems, and financial inclusion. Through our Market Creation programme, we are proud to back initiatives that unlock innovation and deliver lasting impact for people, economies, and the planet,” he said.
To date, Delta40 has invested in and supported 16 companies, including five ventures built directly within its studio. The organisation said it has catalyzed a 5.5 times leverage on its capital.
These ventures, operating in clean energy, agriculture, and fintech, are increasing incomes and advancing planetary health across more than 30 African countries. The portfolio has also created over 5,000 direct and indirect jobs.
The final close of the $20 million fund will allow Delta40 to expand its portfolio and deepen its venture studio support across Africa.
“As an investor and operator, I’ve seen how difficult it is for founders to access both bold capital and hands-on support. Delta40 delivers both, and that’s why I’m confident that future funds will only accelerate the momentum we’re already seeing,” said Biola Alabi, partner, Investments, Delta40.
