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Business Guide

Starting a Business Under 30 in Rwanda

60% of Rwanda’s population is under 25. Young entrepreneurs are building the country’s next economy. Here’s advice, resources, and reality checks.

Marie-Claire Uwimana · Digital marketing and business growth, KigaliPublished Updated 7 min read

When I started my first business at 23, everyone told me I was too young. Too inexperienced. Should get a “real job” first. Three years later, that business was employing people who’d given me the same advice.

If you’re under 30 and thinking about starting a business in Rwanda, here’s what I wish I’d known.

Your advantages

  • Low overhead — you probably don’t have a mortgage, kids’ school fees, or a car loan. Your personal burn rate is low. You can take risks older people can’t
  • Digital native — you understand social media, online tools, and digital marketing intuitively. This is a genuine competitive advantage
  • Energy and hustle — you can work 12-hour days without falling apart. You won’t always have this. Use it
  • Network building years — the relationships you build now compound over decades

Your disadvantages (and how to offset them)

  • Credibility gap — some clients will hesitate because of your age. Offset this with a professional website, professional email, and client testimonials. Let your work speak
  • Limited capital — bootstrap. Start with what you have. Validate before you invest. The best young founders I know started with less than RWF 100,000
  • Limited experience — find mentors. Join incubators. Learn from others’ mistakes, not just your own
  • Impatience — building a real business takes years, not months. The overnight success stories you see online are usually year-5 stories

Resources for young entrepreneurs

  • Hanga Pitchfest — annual competition for Rwandan innovators
  • 250Startups — startup incubator in Kigali
  • Impact Hub Kigali — co-working space with mentorship programmes
  • YouthConnekt — government programme connecting young people with opportunities and mentorship
  • Tony Elumelu Foundation — USD 5,000 seed funding for African entrepreneurs under 35

Business ideas that work for young founders

  • Digital services (web design, social media management, content creation)
  • E-commerce and online retail
  • Food delivery and catering
  • Tutoring and education services
  • Photography and videography
  • Tech solutions for local problems

Start small. Start now. Don’t wait for perfect conditions — they don’t exist. The best time to start a business in Rwanda is when you’re young enough to recover from failure and old enough to learn from it.

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Starting a Business Under 30 in Rwanda · Kisimenti Times