Africa-Press – Kenya. Kenya is the second-best innovation-ready country in Africa after South Africa, an aspect that is moving investors to East Africa’s economic powerhouse.
The latest 2026 Innovators Business Environment Index (IBEI), released by global research platform StartupBlink, spotlights Nairobi’s evolution as one of Africa’s most promising destinations for innovation and entrepreneurship, while also highlighting persistent structural challenges requiring policy attention.
According to the report, Kenya scored 48 points to rank position 68 globally, behind South Africa, which scored 52 points to rank position 61 across 125 countries in the world.
This is a great improvement for Kenya after trailing Nigeria in the previous ecosystem indices.
A total of 25 African countries appeared in the global ranking, with 13 placing in the top 100.
Cape Verde came third on the continent after obtaining 47 points to rank position 70 globally, followed by Morocco, which ranked position 80 with 43.5 points.
Cote d’Ivoire closes the top five segments in Africa to rank position 81 worldwide with a score of 43 points
The framework evaluates countries on a 0–100 scale based on institutional support and operational ease, using over 30 measurable indicators grouped into three core pillars: Ease of Operating a Business, Business Incentives, and Market Perception.
Unlike traditional innovation or economic performance metrics, the IBEI is purpose-built to assess how ready national business environments are for innovators at every stage—from starting a venture to scaling it across borders.
The ranking relies on three main criteria. First, quantity measures the number of startups, incubators, accelerators, coworking spaces, and technology events.
Second, quality assesses investment levels, research and development, the presence of highly valued startups, and international companies. Third, the environment evaluates country stability, Internet access, taxation, and ease of doing business.
According to the report, Kenya’s regulatory environment continues to improve, with reforms aimed at simplifying business registration and strengthening investor protections.
Digital registration platforms and updated legal frameworks have shortened business setup times in recent years, helping to reduce bureaucratic friction.
The index also hails the country’s access to capital. “Kenya has been among Africa’s top recipients of startup investment, with significant venture capital flows into fintech, clean energy, healthtech, and mobility sectors.”
The country’s startups raised close to $1 billion in funding in 2025, the largest amount raised by any African market since 2022, driven overwhelmingly by debt financing into energy and asset-heavy companies – according to new data from ‘Africa: The Big Deal’.
Funding in Kenya rose 52 per cent year over year, accounting for almost one-third of the total funding raised by startups across Africa last year.
It says that domestic and international financing options, however, remain an uneven playing field—with funding heavily concentrated in Nairobi and an ongoing reliance on foreign capital.
Furthermore, the report lauded Kenya’s tax reforms, highlighting the new provisions under Kenya’s Finance Act 2025, which introduced incentives and compliance demands that have drawn concern from startup founders, particularly around unpredictability and cost burdens.
Others are the country’s robust mobile penetration, advanced mobile money networks and ongoing broadband expansion, which underpin Kenya’s digital competitiveness.
“This strength drives connectivity for entrepreneurs and aids wider business adoption of digital services.”
Globally, the United States ranks first, followed by Singapore and the United Kingdom.
The Gulf region stands out for taxation competitiveness, with the United Arab Emirates ranked fifth overall and leading globally on favorable tax conditions. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia ranks first worldwide for friction-reducing policy levers.
Nordic countries dominate digital infrastructure, while smaller economies such as Estonia and New Zealand prove that market size is not a barrier to creating highly competitive innovation environments.





