Egypt has introduced an EGP 10 billion support programme designed to ease the funding pressures facing startups and small to medium-sized enterprises. The initiative expands the government’s long-running effort to revive private-sector activity and widen economic participation at a time when many young companies struggle with capital shortages and rising operating costs.
The programme is structured around concessional financing, giving startups and SMEs access to funding on more favourable terms than traditional commercial loans. The government aims to fill long-standing gaps in working capital, business expansion support, and early-stage funding.
Building on Earlier Signals of State-Backed Support
This programme does not arise in isolation. It follows the government’s earlier allocation of EGP 5 billion in the 2025/2026 budget to MSMEDA. That prior allocation was the largest ever for MSME support. In parallel, policymakers explored a unified funding plan to reach over 5,000 startups.
The new EGP 10 billion package builds on these moves and signals an expanded commitment to entrepreneurship and job creation as central pillars of Egypt’s economic restructuring.
What the Programme Offers
The government has confirmed that the initiative will prioritise businesses operating in sectors vital to economic diversification. Startups are expected to benefit from easier access to scale-up capital, enabling them to pursue product development, hire talent, and expand into new markets.
However, important details remain undisclosed. Eligibility criteria, interest rates, repayment structures, application timelines, and administering agencies have not yet been fully outlined. This lack of clarity leaves entrepreneurs uncertain about when and how they can access the funds.
Without these specifics, the initiative remains a strong signal rather than a fully operational channel.
How This Could Shift the Landscape for Founders
If implemented effectively, the programme could correct several structural barriers that have stunted Egypt’s startup ecosystem for years. Affordable capital could unlock growth for early-stage ventures typically excluded from commercial lending. SMEs could finally overcome the liquidity issues that often keep them small, informal, or financially fragile.
The benefits could extend further: more formalisation, stronger job creation, and deeper participation of local innovators in the country’s economic development agenda.
Success, however, hinges on transparent processes, fair selection mechanisms, and strong oversight. Without these, funding could gravitate towards already-privileged players, weakening the programme’s intended impact.
A Programme Filled With Potential, Waiting for Structure
Egypt’s EGP 10 billion support programme signals a renewed push to energise startups and SMEs as engines of economic growth. Its promise is significant, but its impact depends on how the government translates this commitment into a transparent, accessible, and well-structured financing system.
For now, founders and SME operators are watching closely and preparing for an opportunity that could unlock the next wave of Egypt’s entrepreneurial growth story.











