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Thursday, 26 February 2026

Here’s Why Lagos is the Fastest Growing Tech Ecosystem in the World by Emmanuel Abara Benson


 The ranking evaluated 288 tech hubs across 69 countries and compared them on metrics such as investment growth, startup valuations, unicorn creation, innovation output and talent dynamics, adjusted for local GDP per capita and cost of living.

It was a moment of pride for the Lagos State Government. On its social media pages and in press statements, officials pointed to the ranking as proof of the state’s deliberate intervention and supportive policies in areas like digital skills development, innovation infrastructure and business facilitation; insisting that the trajectory reflects what proactive governance can achieve.

But there is a more nuanced story here. Lagos’s tech boom did not start with a white paper or a government decree. It grew out of necessity, creativity, resilience, and a unique urban dynamism. In a city with a population estimated at more than 20 million and adding new residents by the thousands every day, problems are everywhere, from financial inclusion and logistics to healthcare access and education. Young founders seized these pain points as opportunities, building solutions that scaled quickly because demand was already there.

Fintech startups addressed gaps in banking and payments, logistics tech tackled delivery challenges, and health and education platforms bridged services that were often unavailable or inefficient. These innovators were not waiting for permission or perfect infrastructure; they built in the cracks, often starting with little capital, working from co-working spaces and community hubs, and surviving on resolve as much as funding.

Therefore, it is best to use this moment to acknowledge the vibrancy of the city’s entrepreneurship and celebrate the founders, instead of celebrating hardly impactful or even non-existent political interventions.

Tech founders in Nigeria are mostly young Nigerians under 35, digitally-native and globally networked, whose startups have attracted international venture capital, built products for local and global markets, and shown that innovation does not have to be born in Silicon Valley to matter globally.

That said, there’s no denying Lagos’s position as Nigeria’s commercial heart and a major driver of Africa’s digital transformation. The city’s dense market, young population and network of investors, accelerators and knowledge hubs create a fertile ground where ideas can find customers fast, a rare advantage in many parts of the continent. Investors see immediate scale here; founders see a launchpad for regional or global expansion.

Yet, as impressive as this growth is, it also spotlights critical gaps that could undermine sustainability if left unaddressed. Infrastructure remains a perennial challenge, ranging from unstable power supply, congested roads, high data costs and limited physical spaces designed for deep work all raise the cost and complexity of running tech ventures. Talent retention is another concern, with skilled professionals often opting for opportunities abroad or more comfortable environments because of living conditions and limited support systems. These are not trivial issues; they shape whether Lagos will continue to attract and nurture the next generation of innovators, or whether its brightest will look elsewhere.

For Lagos to truly translate its global ranking into long-term economic transformation, more needs to be done to make it easier to do business. Regulatory bottlenecks, inconsistent policies, red tape and the daily struggles of entrepreneurs can discourage emerging talent and slow growth. Effective collaboration between the government and the private sector, especially with founders on the ground, could leapfrog many of these challenges. Reduced bureaucratic hurdles, improved infrastructure, accessible financing for early-stage startups, and support for sectors beyond fintech would broaden the ecosystem’s base and deepen its resilience.

That said, let’s reiterate that the Dealroom accolade is as much a story of Lagos’s people as it is of Lagos’s policies, a tale of resourcefulness and ambition steering a city toward global relevance. If the accolades of today can be matched with pragmatic reforms tomorrow, Lagos might just become a lasting model for inclusive innovation in Africa and beyond, instead of merely being named the fastest-growing tech ecosystem in 2025.

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