• Africa’s Innovation Frontier
  • African Future Tech
  • Investor Hotspots
  • Reports
  • Africa’s Innovation Frontier
  • African Future Tech
  • Investor Hotspots
  • Reports
Home African Startup Ecosystem

PaidHR Raises $1.8M to Build Africa’s Own Deel: Can the Continent Create a Payroll Infrastructure Built for Its Realities, Not Just Its Aspirations, and Reward Referrals with $5,000?

by Ifeanyi Abraham
June 23, 2025
in African Startup Ecosystem
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nigeria-based HR-tech startup PaidHR has just closed a $1.8 million seed round led by Accion Venture Lab, with participation from Zrosk, Chui Ventures, and Zedcrest Capital. For most observers, this is another funding headline in a volatile capital market. But under the hood, this is something much bigger.

PaidHR is attempting to do for Africa what Deel did for the rest of the world. It aims to transform how businesses manage cross-border payroll, compliance, and workforce infrastructure in one unified platform. It’s a bold play, and one the continent may finally be ready for.

As part of its growth strategy, the startup has launched an aggressive referral campaign. If you refer a business that signs up, you could earn up to $5,000 in cash. This move signals not just a push for scale but a bet on word-of-mouth trust in African SME ecosystems.

You might also like

OpenAI Targets Pre-Idea Founders With New Grove Program That Skips Traditional Accelerator Model

Hotels.ng Shatters Record With ₦210 Million Single Booking in Nigeria’s Hospitality Industry

Could Chowdeck Really Deliver Hilda Baci’s 22,619-Litre Jollof Across Lagos in One Day? We Ran the Numbers.

A Quiet Build, A Loud Signal

Founded in 2020 by Seye Bandele and Lekan Omotosho, PaidHR has largely built under the radar. But the results are starting to speak:

  • $18 million in salaries processed in 2024 (₦29 billion), nearly double the previous year
  • A platform supporting 49 currencies, tailored for African regulatory complexity
  • Over 20,000 employees onboarded
  • More than 200 businesses across Africa currently using the platform

This funding brings their total raise to $2.9 million, including earlier pre-seed investments in 2022 and 2023. With the new capital injection, PaidHR plans to deepen its position in Nigeria, expand into new African markets, and evolve its product suite across payroll, compliance, HRIS, and Earned Wage Access (EWA).

What Deel Got Right. And Why Africa Wasn’t Ready Yet

To understand PaidHR’s potential, you have to look at Deel.

Founded in 2019, Deel skyrocketed from zero to a $12 billion valuation in just four years, riding the wave of global remote work. It became the plug-and-play HR stack for international hiring, unlocking frictionless global payroll across more than 100 countries.

But Deel succeeded because of three conditions:

  1. Mature financial rails such as Stripe and Wise
  2. A global appetite for remote work infrastructure
  3. Strong regulatory compliance layers in key markets

Africa, at the time, lacked all three. But that is changing.

With digital wallets scaling, governments modernising compliance frameworks, and the rise of distributed teams across Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, and Kigali, PaidHR is entering a market that finally has the infrastructure and urgency for this kind of platform.

The PaidHR Difference: Built for Africa, Not Adapted to It

What makes PaidHR compelling isn’t just what it’s borrowing from Deel. It’s what it’s localising.

In previous talks around their innovation and product edge, CEO Seye Bandele has noted, “We’re solving for fragmented payroll realities, from multi-currency support to inconsistent salary disbursement timelines. We’re building where the real pain is.”

He has also pointed out that, similar to Deel, PaidHR now offers employees access to a portion of their earnings before payday. In a continent where liquidity gaps are daily realities, this kind of flexibility could be transformative.

In a region where one business might pay staff in naira, dollars, and CFA simultaneously, and compliance changes with every jurisdiction, PaidHR’s edge lies in its local DNA, not in global mimicry.

While Deel integrates with platforms like Gusto and QuickBooks, PaidHR is thinking in terms of point-of-sale systems in Aba, mobile money in Kigali, and employee onboarding that adapts to languages, policies, and infrastructure that shift every few hundred kilometres.

The Real Test: Can It Scale Without Losing Its Soul?

The question isn’t whether PaidHR can raise more money. It can, and likely will. The bigger question is whether it can grow with discipline.

The HR-tech space is notorious for glossy dashboards and hollow execution. African businesses, many of which have been burned by SaaS overpromises, now expect more than software. They expect clarity, dependability, and solutions that are grounded in local truth.

If PaidHR can keep its product lean, its execution sharp, and its support deeply rooted in market realities, it could become one of the most critical infrastructure plays in the African tech stack.

Final Thought: Africa’s Deel May Not Look Like Deel at All

Deel was born in Silicon Valley. PaidHR is being shaped by the complexity of African economies and the urgency of informal payroll systems. That is exactly what makes it matter.

It may not chase a $12 billion valuation anytime soon, but it doesn’t need to. If it solves payroll for 10,000 African SMEs and gives 1 million workers greater control and clarity over their income, that is impact at scale.

And for the future of work on this continent, that might be the win that matters most.

This article was rewritten with the aid of AI
At Techsoma, we embrace AI and understand our role in providing context, driving narrative and changing culture.

Tags: African TechDeelPaidHR
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Educate Before You Lend: Genzaar’s Co-founder Speaks on Partnering with YouthCred to Empower Nigerian Youth

Next Post

Kenya Tightens Anti-Money Laundering Rules After Europe Adds Country to High-Risk List

Recommended For You

OpenAI Targets Pre-Idea Founders With New Grove Program That Skips Traditional Accelerator Model
African Startup Ecosystem

OpenAI Targets Pre-Idea Founders With New Grove Program That Skips Traditional Accelerator Model

by Faith Amonimo
September 19, 2025
0

OpenAI just rolled out Grove, a fresh take on startup mentoring that throws out the typical accelerator playbook. This five-week program starts October 20 and targets founders who haven't even...

Read moreDetails
Hotels.ng Shatters Record With ₦210 Million Single Booking in Nigeria’s Hospitality Industry

Hotels.ng Shatters Record With ₦210 Million Single Booking in Nigeria’s Hospitality Industry

September 13, 2025
Could Chowdeck Really Deliver Hilda Baci’s 22,619-Litre Jollof Across Lagos in One Day? We Ran the Numbers.

Could Chowdeck Really Deliver Hilda Baci’s 22,619-Litre Jollof Across Lagos in One Day? We Ran the Numbers.

September 13, 2025
The Partnership Playbook: How Smart Founders and Investors Build Winning Startups Together

The Partnership Playbook: How Smart Founders and Investors Build Winning Startups Together

September 13, 2025
New NABAN–Bellatrix Deal Pumps Fresh Capital into Namibia’s Startup Ecosystem

New NABAN–Bellatrix Deal Pumps Fresh Capital into Namibia’s Startup Ecosystem

September 5, 2025
Next Post

Kenya Tightens Anti-Money Laundering Rules After Europe Adds Country to High-Risk List

Egypt Joins Italy's New AI Hub for African Development

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Stories

  • Africa’s window of opportunity: What Trump’s $100,000 H1B Rule and Musk’s Warning Mean for Startups and Global Talent

    Africa’s window of opportunity: What Trump’s $100,000 H1B Rule and Musk’s Warning Mean for Startups and Global Talent

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Small Businesses in Lagos Get Ready To Reject International Cards due to Chargebacks as Detty December Approaches

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Nigeria’s Amended Cybercrime Act: A Double Edged Sword

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 10,000 New Drivers and Partners to Join Lagride This Ember Season Through Nigeria’s Leading Car Leasing Programme and Academy Training 

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Exclusive: Peter Adeleke Reflects on His Guinness World Record for the Longest Leadership Lesson

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa.​

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Get In Touch

United Arab Emirates (Dubai)

Email: Info@techsoma.net

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?