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LIST | Here Are the 5 African Projects Selected in the June 2025 Grants Round by Circle ($USDC)
In a major nod to Africa’s rising crypto innovation scene, Circle has awarded grants to five African blockchain projects in the fourth cohort of its USDC Developer Grants Program. The announcement marks the region’s best performance yet in the program, which has now funded over 60 teams globally since launching in 2023.
Amid a global slowdown in venture funding – especially following the FTX collapse – ecosystem grants like Circle’s are becoming lifelines for early-stage builders. For African founders, where venture capital investment into crypto dropped by over 70% in the first half of 2024, these grants are proving vital for survival and growth.
TL;DR
What Circle Is Offering
The USDC Developer Grants offer funding between $5,000 and $100,000, paid in $USDC, for teams building real-world blockchain applications using Circle’s developer stack.
This includes:
In addition to funding, grantees receive product and compliance support, technical mentorship, co-marketing, and potential referrals to Circle Ventures.
“The applicants’ creativity and ambition pushed us to dig deeper and ultimately select the projects we believe will move the industry forward,” Circle said in its announcement.
Meet the African Grantees
The five African projects selected in Cohort 4 are:
This cohort represents a step-change for African participation. Only one African startup was selected in the second round, rising to three in Cohort 3, and now five in the fourth.
This surge aligns with broader trends in the region, where USDC adoption is accelerating across use cases – from remittances and savings to B2B cross-border trade.
As VC interest in crypto cooled globally, stablecoins have become the most adopted crypto asset across many African markets. Platforms like Onafriq, and Flutterwave – all partnered with Circle’s infrastructure – now process billions in cross-border and intra-Africa payments using stablecoins as settlement tools.
$USDC and $USDT dominate stablecoin flows in Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and South Africa. Circle, however, is pushing harder into developer ecosystems – building out infrastructure and tooling to create long-term Web3 rails.
In contrast, Tether has taken a grassroots approach:
Tether’s model seems to be working much better compared to Circle’s approach in Africa with little traction for $USDC compared to the massive growth of $USDT.
Circle’s initiative is part of a broader shift in how crypto startups raise capital. With traditional VCs pulling back, ecosystem grants have become the new seed round, especially in markets like Africa.
These grants not only offer a financial runway but also grant credibility – opening doors to deeper integrations, product adoption, and eventual Series A funding.
And with Circle’s push into compliant, regulated stablecoin use – evidenced by its approval in Japan and its expanding presence in global financial infrastructure – African grantees are well-positioned to build products that scale across regions.
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