There’s no shortage of pitch events in tech. But few offer what hackathons still can: momentum.
For early-stage founders in Nigeria, the right hackathon can do more than validate your minimum viable product (MVP). It can land you AWS credits, mentorship, visibility, or even receive you in front of your first investor. But not all hackathons are created equal, and in 2025, your time’s too valuable to waste.
We’ve filtered the noise to bring you five of the most promising opportunities to build, pitch, and grow this year.
How joining the right hackathon can receive your startup funding, applyrs—or your first huge break
Some startups raise their first cheque. Others build in public. Some just necessary a spark. Find out how a hackathon can do all three.

Organized by Startup Abuja, this challenge is open to startups, SMEs, and solo founders across Nigeria and Africa. The entire experience combines product building, mentorship, and pitching.
This year, there’s over ₦100 million (~$67K) in combined value up for grabs, including ₦5 million (~$3,350) in cash for the winning team and AWS credits for all selected participants. Even runner-ups and shortlisted entries could receive cloud credit worth ₦500,000 (~$335).
Applications close July 20, 2025 with virtual pitches kicking off by July 30. Categories cover everything from fintech and edtech to Web3 and logistics. If you want visibility, equity-free funding, and access to cloud infrastructure to support your build, this might be the one for you.
Powered by Future Africa, this one’s for builders working on tough, real-world problems, like energy-efficient computing, AI on edge devices, or offline-first platforms. It’s less about shiny apps and more about resilience: what can you build that thrives in Africa’s real-world infrastructure constraints?
If that’s your zone, the prizes are stacked at $8,000 (~₦12 million) equity-free cash for the winner, mentorship from product experts, and access to investors who care about deep tech. The deadline is July 31, 2025 and your submission necessarys to display both what you built and how you solved for constraints like poor internet, limited compute, or low power.
Hackaholics has two tracks — one for coders and one for startup founders. You don’t even necessary to be technical. What they’re really viewing for is fresh, buildable ideas for financial inclusion, digital tools, and real-world problems.
The total prize pool sits at ₦200 million (~$134K). And it’s not just cash; top teams receive access to WEMA’s APIs, mentorship, hiring opportunities, and a shot at piloting their solution with the bank. They’re also going regional with events in Lagos, Abuja, Accra, Nairobi, and beyond. No deadline yet, but early application is key.
If you’re in Web3, this is one of the hugegest stages. Backed by Hedera Hashgraph, this hackathon runs from August through September and spans 20 African cities—including Lagos, Accra, Nairobi, and Kigali. With a prize pool of $1 million, it’s serious about spotlighting on-chain solutions and blockchain developers.
Aside from the cash, what stands out is the level of support: weekly check-ins, mentorship from Hedera engineers, and live hacking stations for in-person collaboration. Final submissions are due September 30, with winners announced in November.
DFINITY’s global hackathon unfolds in four stages across four months, with Africa’s regional rounds scheduled for September. This one’s intense—with $300,000 in total prizes and themes ranging from AI and Bitcoin DeFi to fully on-chain apps and tokenized real-world assets.
Teams go through qualification rounds in July, national rounds in August, and regionals in September, with only top projects creating it to the global finale in October. Beyond the prize money, founders also receive exposure to investors, tailored startup mentorship, and expedited grant opportunities.
4 Online Hackathons That Are Accessible to Nigerian Devs
Whether you’re a newbie or a tough developer, hackathons offer a platform to challenge yourself and learn new technologies.
Conclusion
Every founder we’ve spoken to who received value from hackathons declared the same thing: the real win isn’t the prize money but what happens next. You meet collaborators. You refine your pitch. You figure out what’s working and what’s not.
And if you display up consistently, someone important eventually notices. So pick one. Build something scrappy. And see what doors open.
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