Startups

Cascador Opens Applications for Its 2026 ScaleUp Program

Twelve founders will be selected for a 12-week hybrid programme offering mentorship, a shot at $50,000 in prizes, and access to up to $5 million in growth capital annually.

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If you run a business in Africa that already has customers, revenue, and a product that works — but you’re stuck somewhere between “this is growing” and “this could be massive” — Cascador wants to hear from you.

The Lagos-based entrepreneur support organisation has opened applications for its 2026 ScaleUp Program, targeting a small, selective class of 12 growth-stage founders across the continent. The application window is open now and closes on 15 June, with the programme itself kicking off on 15 August.

What is Cascador, and why does it matter?

Cascador is not your typical early-stage incubator. It does not work with founders still figuring out their idea. It works specifically with founders who have already figured that part out. People running companies with proven traction, paying customers, and a leadership team in place, but who need the strategic clarity, mentorship, and capital to push through to the next stage of growth.

That gap, between a working business and a truly scaled one, is where many African companies stall. Access to venture capital remains constrained across the continent. African startups raised approximately $2.01 billion in 2024, down 31% from the $2.9 billion raised in 2023, according to funding tracker data. Non-dilutive alternatives and growth capital specifically tailored to African market conditions are even harder to come by.

Cascador has built its model precisely around this problem.

What’s in the programme?

The 2026 ScaleUp is a 12-week hybrid experience. Two of those weeks are in-person: covering the programme kickoff and a pitch day, and the remaining 10 weeks are virtual sessions involving the founders and their leadership teams. That structure is deliberate: Cascador is not just coaching the founder, it is working with the team that will actually execute the strategy.

Selected participants get:

Bespoke one-on-one support from investors, African and international advisors, and strategic partners. A Live Pitch Day where the top performers compete for a $50,000 prize pool. And critically, eligibility for follow-on funding through Cascador’s Catalytic Fund — a pool that deploys between $2 million and $5 million annually in growth capital. That capital comes in multiple forms: local currency debt, equity, guarantees, and collateral investments, structured in partnership with Sterling Bank.

The Sterling Bank partnership, first announced in 2025, is worth understanding properly. One of the persistent challenges for African businesses seeking loans is collateral — banks require it, and many growing companies simply do not have enough of it in the form banks recognise. Cascador’s arrangement helps eligible businesses with loan applications, including access to guarantees and collateral support, which in turn allows them to access single-digit interest rate loans from financial institutions. That is a meaningfully different offer from a typical accelerator.

Who is it for?

Cascador says it is looking for founders who have been building for at least two years, can demonstrate measurable traction, and are what the organisation calls “great multipliers” — people whose businesses can transform knowledge and capital into broad economic and social impact. Both technology companies and real-economy ventures — agriculture, manufacturing, logistics, services — are eligible. This is not a programme exclusively for software startups.

The application process is two-stage. The preliminary application takes about 15 minutes. Founders who pass that screen are invited to complete a full application. Cascador is encouraging early submission, with benefits for top early applicants including personal interviews, exclusive event invitations, and early semi-finalist notifications.

In-person Open House events will be held in Abuja on 29 April and in Lagos on 5 May, offering applicants a chance to ask questions and meet alumni before applying.

Track record

Since launching in 2019, Cascador has run seven cohorts and says it has supported 70 ventures that have collectively raised $125 million in capital. In 2025, the organisation’s alumni reportedly created over 67,000 jobs and served more than 1.7 million customers.

Notable alumni include Sycamore (lending), ORÍKÌ (beauty and wellness), Soiless Farm Lab (agriculture), Koolboks (cold chain), Lenco (banking infrastructure), and Drive45 Mobility — whose co-founder and CEO Oluwaseyi Adefemi received ₦2 billion in funding in 2025 and won Cascador’s Exemplary Award in 2024.

Why this matters for East Africa

Cascador has historically been Nigeria-focused, and the programme remains Lagos-anchored in its in-person sessions. But the 2026 programme is positioned as Africa-wide in its ambitions, and growth-stage founders from Kenya and the broader East African region are eligible to apply. As the continent’s funding environment tightens and the gap between early traction and institutional investment widens, programmes offering structured, non-dilutive pathways to growth capital become more relevant across borders — not just in Lagos.

Applications are open at cascador.org. The deadline is 15 June 2026.

The Analyst

The Analyst delivers in-depth, data-driven insights on technology, industry trends, and digital innovation, breaking down complex topics for a clearer understanding. Reach out: Mail@Tech-ish.com

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