The 8th Edition of Algeria’s Largest Startup Competition Is Now Live
The Algeria Startup Challenge (ASC) — the country’s largest open-innovation competition by reach and institutional weight — launched its 8th edition in 2026 under the banner “A New Chapter Begins.” Organized by Leancubator and powered by Soolvit, the program has, across its first seven editions, supported more than 1,800 startups and projects, coached over 12,000 project holders, and generated more than 120 million DZD in contracts and subsidies for participating companies.
The 7th edition, which closed in November 2025, named 16 winners across 39 wilayas and produced 9 signed open-innovation partnership agreements with major corporates including Djezzy, BNP Paribas El Djazaïr, FADERCO, CASH Assurances, and SAA. The 8th edition is the next iteration of that model, not a reset.
What Makes ASC Different From Every Other Algerian Competition
Three structural choices separate ASC from the dozens of startup contests that run each year in Algeria:
- Corporate challenges, not cash prizes. Each track is defined by a sponsoring corporation, which commits to exploring a real commercial relationship with the winning startup. The prize is not a check but a documented pipeline to a first enterprise customer.
- National footprint. The 7th edition’s 39-wilaya representation set a bar that no other Algerian program matches. Applications are reviewed centrally but participation is deliberately national.
- Seven-month runway. The program runs from application through final ceremony — long enough to deliver 70+ hours of training, individual coaching, and immersion sessions.
The model is what the rest of the ecosystem calls corporate open innovation: sponsors identify specific business challenges, founders propose solutions, and the program acts as a structured matchmaking engine between the two.
Advertisement
The 7th Edition as a Baseline for 2026
Because the 8th edition is just starting, the clearest way to understand what winning looks like is to read the 7th edition carefully.
Five tracks defined the 2025 cohort:
- Greentech — sponsored by BNP Paribas El Djazaïr (climate resilience, urban sustainability)
- Harm Reduction — sponsored by Philip Morris International (alternative products, risk reduction)
- Impact Challenge — sponsored by Djezzy (digital inclusion, infrastructure innovation)
- Smart Care — sponsored by FADERCO (healthcare, hygiene technology)
- Insurance & Innovation — sponsored by CASH Assurances, SAA, and UAR (insurtech, claims digitization)
375 applicants advanced into the program. Sixteen became laureates. Each finalist received 10 group training sessions, three individual coaching sessions, and access to Learning & Immersion Days with 15+ partner organizations running 18 workshops.
The 16 winners clustered in cleantech, healthtech, logistics, insurtech, and digital services — a mix that reflects what Algeria’s large corporates actually buy rather than what founders abstractly pitch.
What the 8th Edition Tells Us About the Direction of Travel
Publicly available detail on the 8th edition is still limited — ASC’s official site lists the Edition 8 page, and Leancubator has announced the launch with the framing “A New Chapter Begins” and partnership confirmations visible on LinkedIn and YouTube. Three signals matter for founders:
- Continuity of the open-innovation model. There is no indication ASC is pivoting to a cash-prize or investment-only format. The corporate-challenge structure is the program’s core thesis.
- Expanding partner bench. Each new edition has added a new category of sponsors — from telcos (Djezzy) to banks (BNP Paribas) to insurers (CASH, SAA, UAR). Founders should expect a broader track list than 2025.
- Steady national reach. The 39-wilaya footprint sets the floor, not the ceiling. Founders outside Algiers have a genuine path in.
How Algerian Founders Should Think About ASC in 2026
ASC is not a venture fund, and winning does not equal a funding round. Founders should approach it with the correct mental model:
- ASC is a distribution channel, not a capital source. If you need cash, pair an ASC application with a separate Algeria Startup Fund submission or a conversation with the Algerie Telecom 1.5B DZD fund.
- Target the right track. Pick the corporate whose challenge best maps to your actual product — not the most prestigious name. The winning startups in 2025 were the ones Djezzy or FADERCO could realistically integrate into a pilot within six months.
- Plan for a seven-month engagement. ASC rewards teams that can commit founder time across the full program. Services agencies doing side-project applications rarely make the final 16.
The cumulative impact number — 120 million DZD in contracts and subsidies across seven editions — averages to roughly 17 million DZD per edition. Spread across 16 winners, that is meaningful commercial traction for early-stage Algerian teams but not transformational capital. The real value of ASC is the relationship: a documented conversation with a major corporate buyer is harder to manufacture than a seed check.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Algeria Startup Challenge differ from the Algeria Startup Fund?
ASC is an open-innovation competition that matches startups with corporate partners for pilot contracts — the prize is access, not cash. The Algeria Startup Fund (ASF), a public-private venture fund backed by 2.4 billion DZD across six banks, provides equity investment. Winning ASC often leads to a pilot; ASF leads to a term sheet. Founders should apply to both.
Can a startup outside Algiers realistically win?
Yes. The 7th edition drew winning startups from 39 wilayas, including teams based in Oran, Constantine, Sétif, Tlemcen, and elsewhere. ASC’s application process is centrally reviewed but regionally open, and Leancubator’s coaching is delivered hybrid, so founders do not need to relocate to Algiers to participate.
What kind of corporate partnerships have past ASC cohorts signed?
The 7th edition produced 9 signed open-innovation partnership agreements, with sponsors including Djezzy, BNP Paribas El Djazaïr, FADERCO, CASH Assurances, and SAA. The nature of agreements ranges from pilot contracts and paid proofs-of-concept to longer-term commercial relationships — specifics vary by sponsor but all are documented commitments to explore real business with the winning startup.















