South Africa’s Savant Opens Applications for Hardware Venture Fund

TLDR
- Savant, a South African hardware incubator, has opened applications for its venture fund supporting early-stage science and engineering-based innovations
- The fund offers pre-seed and seed-stage grants to help projects move from prototype to market readiness
- The pre-seed fund, run in partnership with the Technology Innovation Agency, supports projects at Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) 3 or 4
Savant, a South African hardware incubator, has opened applications for its venture fund supporting early-stage science and engineering-based innovations. The fund offers pre-seed and seed-stage grants to help projects move from prototype to market readiness.
Founded in 2005 by Nick Allen, Savant provides commercialisation support for hardware startups. It launched its venture fund in 2019 after raising ZAR110 million ($7.8 million) from the SA SME Fund. Since then, it has backed a range of tech startups.
The pre-seed fund, run in partnership with the Technology Innovation Agency, supports projects at Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) 3 or 4. It provides up to ZAR800,000 ($44,000) over 12–18 months for proof of concept, prototyping, and market research. The seed fund targets projects at TRL 5 or 6, offering up to ZAR1.2 million ($65,000) over 12–24 months to support development of minimum viable products, piloting, and regulatory preparation. Applications are now open.
Daba is Africa's leading investment platform for private and public markets. Download here
Key Takeaways
While software startups often dominate funding headlines in Africa, hardware and deep tech innovations face different hurdles. Long development timelines, capital-intensive R&D, and complex regulatory pathways make it harder for hardware startups to attract early-stage investment. Savant’s structured approach, backed by both public and private capital, provides a rare support system tailored to these challenges. By targeting TRL stages and combining capital with technical guidance, Savant helps founders move from lab to market with less risk. The fund's alignment with South Africa’s broader industrial and innovation policies also strengthens its pipeline. Savant’s model reflects a growing recognition that hardware innovation—particularly in areas like medical devices, cleantech, and industrial automation—requires patient, staged capital. As African economies look to increase manufacturing and IP ownership, platforms like Savant may play a key role in building resilient, tech-driven industries.






Next Frontier
Stay up to date on major news and events in African markets. Delivered weekly.
Pulse54
UDeep-dives into what’s old and new in Africa’s investment landscape. Delivered twice monthly.
Events
Sign up to stay informed about our regular webinars, product launches, and exhibitions.


