⚡ Key Takeaways

COSOB’s equity crowdfunding framework allows licensed portals to raise up to 50 million DZD per startup campaign from retail investors, with portal operators requiring 5 million DZD minimum capital and COSOB authorization. The framework plugs the funding gap between ASF grants and FCPR institutional VC for Algeria’s ~2,300 labeled startups. First authorized portals are expected in Q4 2026.

Bottom Line: Algerian founders with a Startup Label should prepare IFRS-format investor documentation now — crowdfunding campaigns take 60–90 days to structure and early movers will capture maximum retail investor attention when the first portals launch in late 2026.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The COSOB equity crowdfunding framework directly affects Algeria’s ~2,300 labeled startups seeking seed capital and creates a new licensed portal sector, activating retail investment in the tech ecosystem for the first time.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

First portal authorizations expected Q4 2026; founders should prepare investor documentation now; portal operators should begin COSOB authorization dossier immediately.
Key Stakeholders
Startup founders, COSOB, portal operators, retail investors, Startup Algeria Agency
Decision Type
Strategic

This framework opens a new capital formation channel that changes the funding calculus for every early-stage Algerian founder — strategic understanding of the rules is essential for those seeking seed capital.
Priority Level
High

The crowdfunding framework is the most significant new capital market instrument for startups since the FCPR vehicle in 2024, and the first portals will launch within 12 months.

Quick Take: Algerian startup founders holding a Startup Label should immediately draft an investor-ready pitch deck and three-year projection document in IFRS format — crowdfunding campaigns require this as a prerequisite, and preparation takes months. Portal operators should begin the COSOB authorization process now to be among the first licensed platforms when retail investor demand materializes in late 2026.

Why Equity Crowdfunding Arrives Now

For most of Algeria’s startup ecosystem history, founders faced a stark funding binary: either the Algerian Startup Fund (ASF), which has processed over 139 requests and operates as a government-backed vehicle, or private negotiation with the small pool of angel investors clustered in Algiers. The gap between a 3-to-5-million-DZD pre-seed grant and a formal Series A was — until recently — largely unfunded territory.

The FCPR (Fonds Commun de Placement à Risque) vehicle, approved under COSOB Regulation 24-02, created a regulated institutional VC wrapper. But FCPR funds require sophisticated institutional limited partners — family offices, pension funds, and insurers — leaving out the large mass of retail investors who might back early-stage Algerian companies if a simple, regulated mechanism existed.

Equity crowdfunding fills that gap. Under the new framework, a retail investor in Oran or Constantine can invest as little as 10,000 DZD into a startup raising capital through a licensed portal. The portal aggregates investments, issues equity stakes proportional to contribution, and reports to COSOB on an ongoing basis. The startup receives capital; the investor receives a registered shareholding in an unlisted company.

This mirrors models already operating in France (where Bpifrance’s equity crowdfunding framework has channelled over €1.5 billion since 2014), in the UAE (Securities and Commodities Authority framework, 2021), and in Singapore (MAS CMC framework) — jurisdictions that have proven retail participation can scale early-stage funding without triggering the investor protection failures of unregulated platforms.

The timing is deliberate. Algeria’s Fintech Strategy 2024-2030 explicitly targets a cashless economy and broader capital market deepening. Equity crowdfunding feeds both: it digitizes investment flows and activates a new class of retail capital allocators.

What the Rules Actually Say

The COSOB framework establishes two key instrument types: equity participation (shareholders receive ordinary or preference shares) and profit-participation notes (revenue-linked instruments without full voting rights, suited to sharia-compliant structures).

Campaign ceilings. A single startup cannot raise more than 50 million DZD in a 12-month period via crowdfunding portals. This ceiling is set to prevent crowdfunding from substituting for regulated public offerings while still being meaningful for seed and pre-Series A rounds.

Portal authorization. Any entity operating a crowdfunding portal for securities must obtain a COSOB authorization and demonstrate minimum paid-in capital of 5 million DZD. The authorization is non-transferable and renewable annually subject to compliance reporting.

Investor protection. Retail investors (defined as individuals investing fewer than 500,000 DZD per calendar year across all platforms) receive an automatic 72-hour cooling-off period after committing. Platforms must provide a standardized investment risk disclosure document before accepting any funds.

Startup eligibility. Companies must hold the Algerian Startup Label (issued by the Startup Algeria Agency) or be within their first three years of commercial registration. This limits the instrument to genuinely early-stage companies and prevents established SMEs from using crowdfunding as a low-friction debt substitute.

Transparency and exit. Portals must publish audited campaign financials within 30 days of campaign close. There is no regulated secondary market for crowdfunded equity, meaning investors should treat shares as illiquid for three to five years.

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A Three-Step Compliance Roadmap for Portal Operators

1. Obtain COSOB Authorization Before Launching Any Campaign

Portal operators must file an authorization dossier with COSOB including: corporate statutes, proof of 5 million DZD paid-in capital, AML/CFT procedures manual, IT security audit report, and the proposed platform terms and conditions. COSOB has a 90-day review window. Launching campaigns before authorization is received constitutes an unlicensed financial activity under Law 22-18 and exposes operators to administrative suspension and fines of up to 10 million DZD.

Operators should not underestimate the IT security audit requirement. COSOB aligns its cybersecurity standards with the Algerian Startup Fund’s IT governance baseline, which requires multi-factor authentication for investor accounts, encrypted data storage, and annual penetration testing by an ARPCE-approved firm.

2. Build Campaign Vetting Workflows That Protect Both Investors and Your License

Each campaign must pass a COSOB-mandated pre-launch review. This means portal operators need an internal due diligence checklist covering: startup label validity, three years of financial projections (IFRS-compatible), identity verification for all founders, and a negative-list screening against GAFI (the Algerian financial intelligence unit) databases.

Portal liability for investor losses is limited under the framework — operators are not guarantors of return — but failing to screen a startup that later turns out to be fraudulent exposes the portal to license revocation. Build a structured vetting workflow and document every decision; COSOB auditors will request these records during annual compliance reviews.

3. Implement Investor Onboarding That Meets the KYC Tiers

Investors must complete KYC matching the Bank of Algeria’s Instruction 06-2025 digital wallet tiers. Level 1 (basic digital ID, up to 100,000 DZD invested annually) enables the smallest retail investors. Level 2 (scanned ID plus proof of income, up to 500,000 DZD) covers the typical angel-scale investor. Level 3 (video interview plus income verification) is required for anyone investing above 500,000 DZD in a single year.

Portals that operate without integrating KYC at onboarding — relying on post-investment document collection — face automatic suspension under Instruction 06-2025’s agent network liability rules. The Bank of Algeria expects PSP-connected portals to verify identity before any funds move, not after.

The Bigger Picture: How Crowdfunding Fits Algeria’s Funding Stack

The equity crowdfunding framework is not designed to replace institutional VC — it complements it. Think of Algeria’s funding stack as a ladder:

  • Pre-seed (0–5M DZD): ASF grants and incubator stipends
  • Seed / crowdfunding (5–50M DZD): COSOB-licensed equity portals, angel syndicates
  • Series A / FCPR (50M–500M DZD): FCPR vehicles like Afiya Investments, professional VC funds
  • Growth / IPO (500M+ DZD): COSOB Growth Segment on the Algiers Stock Exchange (Bourse d’Alger), fee-waived for labeled startups

The crowdfunding layer is the most underserved rung. Algeria has approximately 2,300 labeled startups as of early 2026, but fewer than 150 have received ASF backing. The remaining 2,150 are either self-funded, bootstrapped from revenue, or stuck in a funding limbo. COSOB-licensed crowdfunding platforms could begin to address that gap within 12–18 months — assuming the first authorized portals launch by Q3 2026.

The precedent from comparable markets is encouraging. France’s equity crowdfunding market funded over 10,000 companies in its first eight years. Morocco’s crowdfunding law (2021) saw the first platform launch within 14 months of legislation passing. Algeria’s ecosystem is more mature than Morocco’s was at the equivalent stage, suggesting uptake could be faster.

What Algerian startup founders should watch for: the first COSOB-authorized portal announcements, expected in Q4 2026. When the first portals go live, founders holding a Startup Label should begin preparing investor-ready documentation now — because crowdfunding campaigns typically take 60–90 days to structure, and early-mover campaigns will capture the most investor attention.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maximum amount an Algerian startup can raise through equity crowdfunding?

Under the COSOB framework, a single startup can raise a maximum of 50 million DZD through licensed crowdfunding portals in any 12-month period. This ceiling applies per company across all authorized platforms combined, not per portal. Companies that need more than 50 million DZD must turn to FCPR vehicles, institutional investors, or the COSOB Growth Segment on the Algiers Stock Exchange.

Do crowdfunding investors receive the same rights as traditional shareholders?

Investors who purchase equity stakes through licensed crowdfunding portals receive registered shareholdings with rights corresponding to their share class — which may include ordinary voting rights or limited-voting preference shares depending on the campaign structure. However, there is no regulated secondary market for these shares, making them illiquid until the company lists on the Algiers Stock Exchange, is acquired, or conducts a buyback. Investors should treat crowdfunding equity as a three-to-five-year illiquid position.

Can a foreign national invest in Algerian equity crowdfunding campaigns?

The framework currently restricts crowdfunding participation to Algerian resident investors and Algerian diaspora investors with active National Resident ID numbers. Foreign non-resident investors cannot participate through crowdfunding portals, though they may invest through the separate FCPR vehicle framework if they qualify as professional investors under COSOB’s accredited investor definitions.

Sources & Further Reading