Application · Cohort 2026

A short application.

Three pages. No pitch deck. We read every submission within fourteen days.
The form

Confidential

Submissions are read only by the investment partners. Nothing is forwarded.

Honest timelines

Fourteen days to first response. Six weeks to a decision.

No fees, ever

We take equity. We do not charge founders for any service before, during or after the engagement.

We look forward to
reading your solutions.

Wanjiru Kariuki

Associate, Sourcing

Wanjiru leads early-stage sourcing across East Africa, meeting hundreds of founders a year and shaping the firm’s pipeline thesis. She trained as an engineer at the University of Nairobi before pivoting to venture.

She runs a small writers’ circle on the side and believes the best founder conversations happen over walking coffee, not slide decks.

Naoise McGrath

Director, LP Relations

Naoise leads Afripathway’s relationships with limited partners — sovereign funds, family offices, and institutional allocators across Europe and the Gulf. He has spent his career in capital formation, previously at a global placement agent.

He reads more annual reports than is healthy and writes the firm’s quarterly LP letter.

Thabo Nkosi

Head of Platform

Thabo runs Afripathway’s platform team — the operators, advisors, and networks that founders draw on after the wire lands. He has scaled commercial functions at three African unicorns and consulted for the IFC across sub-Saharan Africa.

He holds an MBA from Wits Business School and is based in Nairobi with frequent travel to Lagos, Kigali, and Cape Town.

Kwame Mensah

Partner, East Africa

Kwame leads Afripathway’s Nairobi office, overseeing sourcing, diligence, and founder partnership across Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, and Tanzania. He has spent fifteen years building and backing companies in mobile money, agritech, and logistics.

Before joining Afripathway, Kwame co-founded a Nairobi-based fintech that scaled to four markets and was acquired in 2022. He sits on the boards of three portfolio companies.

Amara Okonkwo

Founder & Managing Partner

Amara founded Afripathway after a decade of investing across European venture and African growth markets. Her work focuses on the structural bridges, legal, financial, and human, that allow ambitious founders to operate without borders.

Previously a partner at a London-based growth fund, Amara led investments in fintech, climate, and digital infrastructure across EMEA. She holds an MBA from INSEAD and a degree in Economics from Trinity College Dublin.

← Insights

Sectors · Feb 2026 · 6 min

Why Fintech Is Only
the Beginning

Climate, mobility, agritech and creative IP are the next four corridors. Here is how we are mapping them.

M-Pesa cast a long shadow. For a decade, every Kenyan startup story was a fintech story.

That era is closing. The next decade belongs to climate infrastructure, urban mobility, agricultural data, and exportable creative IP.

← Insights

Capital · Mar 2026 · 5 min

What European Capital Actually Wants
from African Founders

After 80 conversations with EU-based investors, a clear pattern emerged. It wasn't what most decks lead with.

European LPs don’t want exposure to ‘Africa.’ They want exposure to specific, defensible cash-flow businesses with a clear line of sight to a regulated jurisdiction.

The founders that close are the ones who arrive in Dublin already structured, already compliant, already auditable.

← Insights

Thesis · Apr 2026 · 7 min

The Nairobi
Dublin Corridor

Why Ireland is the most underrated launchpad for African technology entering the European market.

For a generation, Kenyan startups looking westward defaulted to London or San Francisco. Both are crowded, expensive, and increasingly indifferent.

Ireland is something else. A common-law jurisdiction inside the EU. English-speaking. A 12.5% corporate rate. Twenty-four of the world’s top twenty-five technology firms already have headquarters within a 6-kilometre radius of Dublin’s IFSC.

Afripathway exists because the corridor between Nairobi and Dublin is open — and almost no one is walking it yet.