When you look at Nigerian VC funding in 2025, the headline is simple: fintech dominated with 91% of capital.
But when you zoom out to five years, the story gets more interesting: Fintech: $3.73 billion, Logistics: $137 million A 27x difference.
And 2021 — the year logistics “peaked” at $110M — was actually the year the sector’s fate was sealed. Because that $110M? It wasn’t really for logistics. TradeDepot’s $110 million Series B — the largest logistics round ever in Nigeria — funded their Buy-Now-Pay-Later product.
A logistics company had to build credit infrastructure to attract that capital. The logistics companies that survived the 2022–2025 funding winter weren’t the ones with better routing algorithms or more efficient warehouses.
They were the ones that became fintech companies. This is the data-driven story of why Nigerian VCs chose infrastructure over applications — and what it means for anyone building in Nigeria in 2026.
The 2025 Data: Infrastructure Still Dominates To understand the infrastructure-first thesis, let’s start with what happened in 2025.
FINTECH:
LOGISTICS/DELIVERY:
CLEANTECH:
EDTECH & AGRITECH:
FINTECH TOTAL: ~$171.4M
EVERYTHING ELSE: ~$15.7M
91% of deployed capital went into a single sector — even though fintech represented less than half of total deal count.
This wasn’t a one-off.
To understand how dominant fintech has become, let’s compare it to the sector that should be its biggest competitor: B2B e-commerce and logistics.
Nigeria has perfect conditions for logistics tech:
Yet this is what happened:
Over five years, fintech raised 27x more capital than logistics.
2020 — The Starting Gap
Fintech already had an overwhelming lead.
2021 — The Brief Hope
Logistics peaked — entirely driven by 2–3 mega deals.
2022–2025 — The Collapse
Logistics funding collapsed:
Fintech stayed resilient:
From 2021’s peak of $110M, logistics fell 95% to just $9M in 2025.
Fintech maintained $400M+ annually for three straight years.
The inflection point was 2021.
That year, while logistics peaked at $110M (all a mega-deal), fintech exploded to $1.1 billion — spreading across dozens of deals, multiple sectors (payments, lending, crypto), and building actual infrastructure.
Look at logistics’ “peak” in 2021:
TradeDepot: $110M wasn't really logistics it was for Buy-Now-Pay-Later product. (credit infrastructure).
The biggest logistics rounds were actually fintech in disguise.
and then
Transport and logistics funding in Africa collapsed from 2022 to 2023, while fintech held steady at $410M both years.
When capital tightened: VC Risk Preferences Changed
why?
VCs didn’t abandon logistics because they stopped believing in commerce. They realized logistics couldn’t scale without infrastructure underneath.
Fintech filled what banks couldn’t:
These aren’t “nice to haves.” They’re missing pieces of the financial system. Fintechs stepped in to fill these gaps with mobile wallets, USSD banking, alternative credit scoring using payment history, and stablecoin infrastructure for dollar-pegged savings.
Moniepoint didn’t build a better bank — it built banking infrastructure in 300,000 agent locations, bringing financial services to areas banks won’t serve. The company completed 5.2 billion transactions in 2023.
Anchor didn’t build another payment app — it built APIs that let other companies embed payments, payroll, and lending. The platform processed ₦1 trillion (~$650M) in transactions in 2024.
Kredete isn’t just another lending platform — it’s stablecoin-backed credit infrastructure that solves both the lending gap and currency risk simultaneously.
The business models tell the story:
Fintech Infrastructure:
Logistics/B2B Commerce:
The Nigerian government actively supported fintech growth in 2024–2025:
These fintech-friendly reforms rebuilt investor confidence. As a result, Nigeria remained a core market for fintech capital in recent years.
Meanwhile, logistics received no special infrastructure support, no regulatory fast-tracks, and no government backing.
Fintech demonstrated it could actually scale in African conditions:
Logistics is still proving its economics.
VCs realized a fundamental truth: you need the rails before you can run the trains.
Not:
But:
Infrastructure first. Applications later.
That’s the playbook.
The market is clear: build the infrastructure first. Consumer apps come after.
that is why a number of logistics companies that lived — mutated:
Logistics had to become fintech to survive.
Nigerian commerce models without embedded financial infrastructure have struggled to scale.
Logistics companies aren’t competing with other logistics companies.
They’re competing with fintech’s;
If 2025 showed fintech infrastructure dominating everything else, 2026 will double down on that thesis.
Expect More Funding For:
Expect Less Funding For:
Nigerian VCs are funding the operating system, not the apps. They’re betting on:
If you’re building in Nigeria in 2026, ask yourself:
The market has spoken. Infrastructure wins.
This isn’t about fintech being “hot.” It’s about fintech solving fundamental infrastructure problems that were blocking everything else from scaling.
You can’t build efficient logistics without digital payments. You can’t scale B2B commerce without embedded credit. You can’t serve informal retailers without mobile money infrastructure.
Nigerian VCs figured this out. They’re funding the picks and shovels, not the miners.
And once those rails are built — the payment infrastructure, the credit systems, the identity layers, the compliance tools — then consumer apps can scale on top.
And that single insight explains 91% of capital concentration in 2025.
2026 will test this thesis.
All signs point to it holding.
This analysis is based on publicly disclosed equity rounds for Nigeria-based startups from January to December 2025, sourced from press releases, VC disclosures, and industry reporting platforms including TechCabal, Techpoint, BusinessDay, and TechCrunch. Debt financing, grants, and fund closes (e.g., Ventures Platform’s $64M Fund II) are excluded. Figures are approximations based on available data; not all deals disclose exact amounts
Why Nigerian VCs Bet $3.73B on Fintech and Only $137M on Logistics: The Infrastructure-First Thesis was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


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