Zazu, the pan-African digital banking platform designed specifically for entrepreneurs and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), has successfully concluded a pre-seed funding round, raising US$1 million. This crucial capital injection, secured from a coalition of prominent African and European investors, is designated to accelerate Zazu’s immediate rollout strategy in South Africa and Morocco, positioning the startup for broader continental expansion planned throughout 2026. The platform aims to address the significant financial inclusion gap currently faced by Africa’s estimated 50 million underserved SMEs.
The company was co-founded by Germain Bahri and Rinse Jacobs, both of whom are former executives from the European challenger bank Solarisbank, bringing with them substantial fintech expertise derived from the highly regulated European market. Their vision is to replicate a “Mercury-style” digital banking experience—referencing the popular US platform for startups—tailored specifically to the distinct financial needs and operational realities of African entrepreneurs. This approach seeks to merge the efficiency and technological robustness of European fintech with an intimate knowledge of local African business environments.
Zazu is already demonstrating strong early market traction, having onboarded more than 50 SMEs in its current beta phase, alongside accumulating a substantial waiting list of over 1,000 businesses eager to access its platform. This early demand underscores the significant unmet need for integrated, SME-centric financial tools across the continent, where traditional banking institutions often fail to provide the necessary flexibility and technology required by small, high-growth enterprises.
The US$1 million pre-seed round saw lead participation from Plug and Play Ventures, supplemented by a high-profile, strategic group of angel investors and established fintech founders. These included prominent figures such as Zachariah George of Launch Africa Ventures, Akshay Patel of Paymentology, and Ismael Belkhayat of Chari, alongside several founding members from successful European fintech unicorns like Qonto and Solarisbank. This specific mix of capital provides Zazu with both the financial backing and deep industry knowledge necessary for navigating both African and international regulatory and technological challenges.
The digital banking platform is already operational in its initial target markets, South Africa and Morocco. In these regions, Zazu has successfully integrated its services with key local ecosystem players, including payment gateways such as Paystack and Ozow, and the e-commerce platform Shopstar. Furthermore, the company has secured over twenty partnerships with various ecosystem stakeholders, embedding its financial products directly into the digital workflows used by local entrepreneurs.
The accelerated expansion into South Africa and Morocco is timely, as the demand for digital financial services among SMEs surges. A 2024 analysis by Briter Bridges noted that, despite receiving only a small fraction of overall fintech investment, African SME-focused platforms represent one of the highest-potential growth segments, driven by rising mobile penetration and a need for improved cash-flow management tools. Zazu is aiming to capture this market by offering services that tackle core SME pain points, such as fragmented cross-border payments and access to short-term working capital.
Following this promising early traction and successful pre-seed closing, Zazu is preparing to launch its seed funding round in early 2026. This next phase of fundraising will strategically target a limited group of investors who can support its ambitious pan-African expansion plans and fund the development and launch of a suite of new financial products specifically engineered to meet the sophisticated needs of growing entrepreneurs.

