MENA startups raised $150 million in April 2026. That is more than triple the $48.3 million recorded in March. Yet the numbers still sit 42 percent below April 2025 levels. Investors returned with caution, not confidence.
What the Numbers Actually Show
April delivered 27 deals. That marks a 211 percent jump month-on-month. Early-stage activity led the way with 17 deals worth $40.6 million. Only one later-stage round appeared. Egypt-based Lucky closed a $23 million Series B.
Roughly half the capital came through debt financing. Two large debt deals alone accounted for around $80 million. Debt gives investors more protection and less dilution for founders. It also signals that many backers still prefer structured capital over full equity risk in the current environment.
Overall, the rebound feels selective. Activity picked up after one of the weakest months in years, but the market has not snapped back to previous patterns.
UAE Stays Dominant as Capital Concentrates
The United Arab Emirates captured $78 million across eight deals. That equals 52 percent of total April funding. Saudi Arabia followed with $26.2 million across seven startups. Egypt raised a similar amount across five deals. Smaller Gulf markets (Oman, Bahrain, and Qatar) added $14.5 million through five transactions.
This concentration continues a familiar trend. Capital flows heaviest to the most mature hubs. Founders outside these markets face a tougher task attracting attention right now.
Fintech Leads Again While B2B Rules
Fintech once again topped the sectors. It pulled in $89.4 million across seven deals. This marks the fourth straight month in the lead. E-commerce returned with $19.3 million across four deals. Online services took $15 million, and food technology added $13 million.
B2B startups captured $95.8 million across 11 deals. B2C companies raised $35.8 million across 12 deals. In uncertain times, investors lean toward businesses with predictable revenue, enterprise contracts, and models that sit closer to infrastructure or regulation.
The Cautious Playbook for 2026
Female-led startups reappeared after a two-month gap. They raised $1.5 million across five deals. Male-led teams still took the vast majority at $138.8 million. Mixed teams added $10 million.
This selective rebound sits against a tough first quarter. MENA funding fell 37 percent year-on-year in Q1. We previously covered how the numbers looked amid broader uncertainty and the specific impact of geopolitical tensions.
Founders now operate in a market that has found a floor. Capital exists, but it arrives on stricter terms. Revenue traction matters more. Runways need to stretch longer. Alternative financing options become relevant earlier. Pure growth-at-all-costs stories face the hardest sell.
The coming months will test whether this measured return builds into something steadier. For now, the message is clear. Activity is back, but only for startups that fit the new, more disciplined logic.










