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Algeria’s Startup Law: The Complete Guide to the Regulatory Framework in 2026

February 22, 2026

Modern co-working space with Algerian flag, laptop showing charts, and scales of justice overlooking Mediterranean cityscape

Introduction

Algeria made a decisive turn toward startup-driven economic development with Executive Decree No. 20-254 of September 15, 2020, which established the national startup labeling system — the centerpiece of what is commonly called the Startup Law. This legislation, elaborated through a series of executive decrees and institutional developments over the following years, created Algeria’s first formal ecosystem framework for high-growth innovative companies: a national labeling system, a public investment fund, tax incentives, administrative simplifications, and a venture capital framework.

By mid-2024, over 2,300 startups had been officially labeled under the national system. Algeria’s 124 active university incubators — engaging 60,000 students — have produced 1,600 micro-enterprises, 1,175 projects labeled “innovative,” and 2,800 registered patents. Algerian startups raised $650 million in 2024, marking a 60% increase over the previous year. The government has set an ambitious target of 20,000 startups by 2029. The FCPR (Fonds Commun de Placement à Risque) framework, authorized by COSOB in late 2024, opened private venture capital for the first time in a meaningful way.

This article is the definitive guide to Algeria’s startup regulatory framework as it stands in 2026 — covering the labeling system, tax incentives, investment mechanisms, and the practical steps to navigate the ecosystem.


The Startup Label: What It Is and Why It Matters

The central pillar of Algeria’s startup framework is the national startup label — a formal designation granted by the Ministry of Knowledge Economy, Startups and Micro-enterprises that confers specific rights, benefits, and recognition on qualifying companies.

Eligibility Criteria

To qualify for the startup label under Executive Decree No. 20-254, a company must meet specific criteria defined in Article 11, which include:

  • R&D commitment: The company invests at least 15% of its revenue in research and development
  • Qualified founders: At least half of the founding team holds a doctorate or higher degree
  • Intellectual property: The company holds an invention patent or nationally/internationally registered program
  • Working prototype: The company can present a prototype — which can be an electronic platform, demo version, industrialized product, company application, or illustrative video

Companies must meet at least one of these innovation criteria, in addition to:

  • Legally constituted: Registered as a commercial entity in Algeria (typically SARL or EURL)
  • Early stage: The enterprise must not exceed 8 years of age

The evaluation is conducted by a National Committee comprising expert evaluators, representatives of incubators and accelerators, and public authorities. The committee assesses the innovation claim, market opportunity, and the team’s capacity to execute.

What the Label Provides

Tax benefits:

  • 3-year income tax (IBS) exemption: From the date of startup label award, the company is exempt from corporate income tax for three years — renewable for an additional three years if performance criteria are met
  • VAT exemption on equipment: Imported or locally acquired equipment for the startup’s core activity is exempt from VAT during the startup phase
  • Registration tax exemptions: Reduced or eliminated registration taxes on capital contributions during the startup phase

Administrative simplifications:

  • One-stop-shop for administrative formalities related to startup activities (reducing the bureaucratic burden that plagues business operations in Algeria)
  • Priority access to public procurement tenders — government agencies are encouraged to favor labeled startups in ICT and innovation-related contracts
  • Simplified processes for foreign talent recruitment for labeled startups that need international expertise

Access to financing:

  • Priority access to Algerian Startup Fund (ASF) investment instruments
  • Eligibility for FCPR venture capital funds
  • Access to innovation grant programs administered through the Ministry

Stock market access:

  • Algeria has opened stock market access to labeled startups with fee waivers through 2028, providing a potential exit pathway for investors and a capital-raising mechanism for growth-stage companies

Market validation:

  • The label provides a form of government validation that can be meaningful for B2B sales and partnership negotiations
  • International visibility through Algeria’s participation in African and Arab startup ecosystem events

The Algerian Startup Fund (ASF)

The Algerian Startup Fund (ASF / Fonds Algérien des Startups) was launched in 2020 as a public investment fund with a capitalization of 2.4 billion Algerian dinars. It is the primary government vehicle for direct equity investment in labeled startups.

Investment Instruments

ASF provides three levels of financing tailored to startup stage:

Equity investment tiers:

  • Level 1: Up to 2 million dinars — for early-stage proof-of-concept and initial company formation
  • Level 2: Up to 5 million dinars — for startups with validated products seeking initial market traction
  • Level 3: Up to 20 million dinars — for growth-stage startups with demonstrated revenue and scaling potential

Convertible instruments: Convertible notes and other quasi-equity instruments allow ASF to provide financing that converts to equity at a future funding event, appropriate for early-stage companies where valuation is difficult to establish.

Co-investment: ASF actively seeks to co-invest alongside private investors — the FCPR framework and private angel investors — preferring to catalyze private capital rather than be the sole investor.

Portfolio and Track Record

By 2025, ASF had funded over 130 startups across 20 business sectors, with portfolio companies in fintech, health tech, agricultural technology, logistics, education technology, and industrial IoT.

A significant milestone came in December 2025 when travel-tech startup Völz completed its Series A funding round — representing ASF’s first successful exit with an estimated 3.35x return on its initial investment. This demonstrated that the fund’s investment thesis can generate meaningful returns, an important signal for the broader ecosystem.

Notable portfolio characteristics:

  • Geographic concentration: most funded startups are based in Algiers, with growing representation from Oran, Constantine, and Annaba
  • Sector diversity: while technology is central, the fund’s mandate covers all innovative sectors
  • Gender balance challenges: female-founded startups remain a minority in the funded portfolio, consistent with the broader gender gap in Algeria’s entrepreneurship ecosystem

The FCPR Framework: Private Venture Capital Comes to Algeria

The authorization of the FCPR (Fonds Commun de Placement à Risque) framework was a landmark development for Algeria’s startup ecosystem. The FCPR is a French-model collective investment vehicle adapted for Algeria’s legal and regulatory context — enabling pooled investment in high-risk, high-return venture capital strategies.

Regulatory Foundation

The framework was established by COSOB Regulation n°24-02 of October 23, 2024, relating to Collective Investment Undertakings for Venture Capital (OPCR). The regulation was published in the Official Journal in May 2025, making it operationally effective.

Key Features

Minimum fund size: FCPRs can be established with as little as 50 million Algerian dinars (approximately $365,000 USD) — a deliberately low threshold designed to enable the first generation of local fund managers to establish track records.

Minimum investors: FCPRs require a minimum of just two investors (unitholders) — enabling the fund model to be used even in contexts where institutional investor pools are limited.

Investment scope: FCPR funds can invest in startup equity across a wide range of sectors, with the innovation and growth potential of portfolio companies being the primary selection criterion.

Regulatory oversight: FCPRs are supervised by COSOB (Commission d’Organisation et de Surveillance des Opérations de Bourse) — Algeria’s capital markets regulator. The supervisory framework provides investor protection while allowing investment flexibility.

First Approved FCPR

Afiya Investments became the first approved FCPR in Algeria, managed by Tell Markets, a company specializing in structuring and managing investment funds. The fund focuses its investments on financing unlisted companies in healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and renewable energy sectors. Tell Markets was given three months from approval to effectively launch the fund.

Why the FCPR Framework Matters

Before the FCPR framework, private equity investment in Algerian startups was limited by the absence of a recognized legal vehicle for pooled private investment. The FCPR framework changes this by:

  • Creating a recognized legal structure that international investors understand
  • Providing regulatory oversight that builds investor confidence
  • Enabling fund managers to raise capital from multiple investors and deploy it professionally
  • Creating exit pathway infrastructure — FCPR fund terms define liquidation timelines and processes that give investors clarity on when and how returns will be realized

The Innovation Label: A Stepping Stone to Startup Status

In addition to the startup label, Algeria has created an “innovation label” for projects and individuals at the ideation stage — not yet constituted as formal companies. This label:

  • Provides access to incubation support (workspace, mentorship, prototyping resources)
  • Entitles holders to certain administrative simplifications for setting up a company
  • Creates a track record that strengthens a subsequent startup label application
  • Includes access to pre-seed funding instruments for proof-of-concept development

By mid-2025, 1,175 projects held innovation labels — representing a significant pipeline of potential future labeled startups.


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The Micro-Enterprise Framework

Alongside the startup ecosystem, Algeria has also developed a robust micro-enterprise support framework — for smaller, locally-focused ventures that do not meet the innovation/scalability criteria for startup labels but benefit from formalization support.

The micro-enterprise (microentreprise) framework provides:

  • Simplified commercial registration
  • Reduced social contribution rates for the initial operating years
  • Access to public support programs (training, equipment subsidies)
  • ANSEJ (Agence Nationale de Soutien à l’Emploi des Jeunes) and CNAC (Caisse Nationale d’Assurance Chômage) financing instruments for younger entrepreneurs

By mid-2025, 1,600 micro-enterprises were operating within the recognized framework. The distinction between startup and micro-enterprise matters for policy targeting: startups are the focus of venture capital and high-growth support; micro-enterprises are the focus of employment creation and local development programs.


Practical Steps: How to Get the Startup Label

For entrepreneurs seeking to obtain the startup label, the process involves:

Step 1: Commercial registration
Establish the company with CNRC (commercial registry). The minimum for a SARL is 2 shareholders with DZD 100,000 minimum capital; alternatively, a EURL (single-shareholder equivalent) is possible.

Step 2: Application preparation
Prepare the startup label application, which must include:

  • A business plan demonstrating the innovation claim (what is new about the product/service and why)
  • Documentation satisfying at least one of the Article 11 criteria (R&D spend, founder qualifications, IP, or working prototype)
  • Market analysis demonstrating growth potential
  • Team biography demonstrating capacity to execute
  • Financial projections (3-year)
  • Any existing traction (customers, revenue, pilot results, letters of intent)

Step 3: Application submission
Submit through the official Startup Algeria platform (startup-algeria.com) — the government’s one-stop portal for the startup ecosystem.

Step 4: Evaluation
The National Committee evaluates applications on a rolling basis. Processing times have varied historically from 2–6 months; the government has targeted acceleration of this timeline.

Step 5: Label award and maintenance
Successful applicants receive the startup label for an initial period. The label requires periodic review and renewal — labeled startups must demonstrate continued innovation activity and business development to maintain the designation.


Ecosystem Infrastructure: Beyond the Label

The startup label and ASF investment represent the core of the formal framework, but a broader ecosystem infrastructure surrounds them:

University incubators: Algeria has 124 active incubators within higher education and research institutions, engaging 60,000 students whose final-year projects focus on launching startups, micro-enterprises, or patent applications. Major universities including USTHB and ESI in Algiers have active technology-focused incubation programs.

Private incubators and accelerators: Private incubators operate in Algiers, Oran, and Constantine, complementing the university network. The quality and resources available vary significantly.

Hackathons and competitions: The national startup ecosystem hosts regular hackathons — including the first National Vocational Training Hackathon (2026) — pitch competitions, and innovation challenges. These events identify talent, create connections, and generate visibility for promising projects.

The Africa fund: In September 2025, President Tebboune announced the African Startup and Young Innovators Financing Fund — a $1 billion commitment to support African startups across technology, education, health, and humanitarian sectors. Managed by the Algerian Agency for International Cooperation, the fund — if fully deployed — would position Algeria as a major source of startup capital across the continent and create international networks for Algerian startups.


Challenges in the Ecosystem: An Honest Assessment

Funding gaps: While ASF and the new FCPR framework have improved the early-stage financing landscape, growth-stage funding (Series A equivalent) remains scarce. Companies that successfully build products and achieve initial traction face a funding gap when they need $1–5 million to scale — too large for ASF’s typical instruments (capped at 20M DZD / ~$150K), too early for the limited international PE/VC interest in Algeria.

Exit markets: For VC economics to work, investors need to exit — through acquisitions, IPOs, or secondary sales. The new stock market access for startups with fee waivers through 2028 is a positive step, but Algeria’s startup IPO track record is essentially non-existent. M&A activity is limited. Until exit pathways mature, even successful startups may struggle to provide investor liquidity.

Regulatory burden: Despite simplifications, Algerian entrepreneurs still navigate significant bureaucratic complexity: multiple registration requirements, complex tax reporting, foreign currency restrictions, and sector-specific licensing. Streamlining these further — particularly for digital-native businesses — would reduce startup mortality rates.

Talent competition: The brain drain affects startups acutely. A startup that recruits and trains a talented developer faces a constant risk of losing that person to emigration or to better-paying opportunities (including remote work for international companies). Equity compensation helps but requires the FCPR framework to create realistic exit value.

Cultural factors: Entrepreneurship culture in Algeria is growing but still relatively new. Risk tolerance, comfort with failure (an essential aspect of innovation-driven entrepreneurship), and the stigma associated with business failure all affect the ecosystem’s dynamism.


The 20,000 Startups Target: Realistic or Aspirational?

The government’s target of growing to 20,000 labeled startups by 2029 — from approximately 2,300 in mid-2024 — requires roughly 9x growth in five years.

For the target to be achievable requires: dramatically streamlining the label application and evaluation process, expanding the definition of qualifying innovative startups, building human capital in entrepreneurship at universities and vocational programs, ensuring the FCPR framework generates meaningful private capital deployment, and addressing the talent retention challenge.

Precedent from comparable markets: Morocco grew from a handful of recognized startups to thousands over a decade through a combination of regulatory simplification, ecosystem infrastructure investment, and organic entrepreneurial culture development. Tunisia’s startup ecosystem grew rapidly after the Startup Act created a clear legal framework. The trajectory is achievable, though the timeline is ambitious.

The number matters less than the quality: A smaller number of funded, growing, revenue-generating startups is more valuable than a large number of label-holding companies that remain at idea stage. The ecosystem’s success should be measured not just by label count but by employment created, revenue generated, products exported, and innovation produced. ASF’s first successful exit (Völz, 3.35x return) is a more meaningful milestone than any label count.

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Decision Radar

Dimension Assessment
Relevance for Algeria High — the startup label and FCPR framework are the primary mechanisms for innovation-driven entrepreneurship in Algeria
Action Timeline Immediate — the label application system, ASF funding, and FCPR framework are all operational now
Key Stakeholders Tech entrepreneurs, university graduates, diaspora investors, fund managers, incubator operators, Ministry of Knowledge Economy
Decision Type Strategic — shapes the structure and funding of innovation in Algeria for the next 5 years
Priority Level High

Quick Take: If you’re building a tech startup in Algeria, apply for the startup label now — the tax exemptions and ASF access alone justify the application effort. For investors (especially diaspora), the FCPR framework finally provides a regulated vehicle to back Algerian startups. The ecosystem is still early, but the $650 million raised in 2024 and ASF’s first profitable exit signal that real commercial activity is happening.


Quick Reference: Key Startup Resources

Resource URL
Startup Algeria (official portal) startup-algeria.com
Algerian Startup Fund asf.dz
Ministry of Knowledge Economy known.gov.dz
CNRC (commercial registry) cnrc.org.dz
COSOB (capital markets regulator) cosob.dz

Sources

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