⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria’s 2,400 km Trans-Saharan Highway section is complete and overall corridor completion exceeds 90%, finally giving Algerian startups a physical route into Niger, Mali, and Mauritania. Yassir — with 6 million users and 130,000 partners across seven countries — has already validated the playbook, and Temtem, B2B freight specialists, and fintech-first players are lining up to follow.

Bottom Line: Scope one Sahel beachhead this quarter and build the customs, payments, and logistics stack around that single city.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The Sahel is the first realistic international expansion corridor for Algerian logistics, fintech, and mobility startups since independence.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

Completed highway, warmer diplomatic ties, and AfCFTA tariffs create a narrow window to stake beachheads before regional incumbents respond.
Key Stakeholders
Logistics founders, fintech operators, VC funds, diaspora investors, exporters
Decision Type
Strategic

Cross-border expansion decisions made in 2026 will define the region’s startup map for the decade.
Priority Level
High

A compressed window of infrastructural readiness and diplomatic alignment that may not reopen quickly.

Quick Take: Pick a single beachhead city (Niamey, Nouakchott, or Bamako), route settlements through a CFA-friendly hub, partner with a licensed local operator, and start with Algerian-made goods rather than generic pan-African freight.

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