For the second consecutive year, Senegalese fintech, Wave, was the only African company featured in Y Combinator’s top 50 highest-earning startups of 2024.
The list includes the likes of:
AirBnB
Reddit
Stripe
Coinbase
InstaCart
Scribd
Zapier
Optimizely
RazorPay
Scale AI
among others.
According to Garry Tan, the CEO of Y Combinator:
“Revenue is the clearest indicator of a startup’s success, and we’re excited to see so many different types of companies represented.”
The featured companies all generated above a certain threshold of revenue in 2023, Tan added.
Stats About the 2024 Top Companies List
The total revenue generated by these companies in 2023 is $57.2B
The companies on this list are collectively valued at $458B
Sectors represented:
B2B software and services (52%)
Consumer (23%)
Financial technology and services (19%)
Healthcare (2%)
Bio and industrials (2%)
Real estate and construction (2%)
13 companies (27%) on the list have had an exit, 11 are publicly traded
Together, these companies employ over 80K people
Over 50% are headquartered in the Bay Area
The vast majority of these companies (over 90%) were founded by 2 or more co-founders
Reddit (YC S05) is the oldest company on the list
Zepto (YC W21) is the youngest company on the list
The S12 batch is the best represented, with 5 companies on the list:
* Benchling
* Coinbase
* Instacart
* SmartAsset
* Zapier
The companies that are new to the Top Revenue list this year:
Clipboard Health – Connects healthcare facilities with nurses nearby
HoneyLove – Innovative shapewear
Meesho – Democratizing internet commerce in India
Odeko – Operations software for running and growing your cafe
RazorPay – India’s full-stack financial solution for businesses
Zepto – 10-minute grocery delivery in India
Wave, founded by Drew Durbin and Lincoln Quirk, previously of Sendwave, launched its mobile money product in Senegal in 2018 as a challenger to telcos like Orange and Free Senegal which control 77% of the telco market combined.
During that period, telecommunications companies were imposing transaction fees ranging from 5% to 10%. However, with Wave’s entry into the market, these rates plummeted by up to 70%, accompanied by the introduction of complimentary deposit and withdrawal services through its mobile application.
Wave also brought a flat transaction fee of 1% for peer-to-peer money transfers which was a new standard in the industry. Subsequently, its competitors responded by slashing their prices by up to 80%, and some even restricted their customers from buying airtime through Wave’s mobile app in an attempt to rival Wave’s market dominance.
By 2023, Wave had a user base of 6 million individuals, representing approximately 75% of the adult population in Senegal alone. Its reach extended further across:
Senegal
Côte d’Ivoire
Burkina Faso
Mali
Uganda, and
Gambia
accumulating a total of 10 million users.
Notably, in 2022, it processed 12 billion transactions within Senegal alone.
YCombinator boasts 92 African startups in its portfolio, with 3 having joined the latest batch (W24).
A total of 260 companies joined the batch from over 27,000 applications, at least 50% building around AI in one form or another*.*
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
LIST | Senegalese Fintech, Wave, is the Only African Company Among Y Combinator’s ‘Top 50 Highest-Earning Startups of 2024’
For the second consecutive year, Senegalese fintech, Wave, was the only African company featured in Y Combinator’s top 50 highest-earning startups of 2024.
The list includes the likes of:
among others.
According to Garry Tan, the CEO of Y Combinator:
“Revenue is the clearest indicator of a startup’s success, and we’re excited to see so many different types of companies represented.”
The featured companies all generated above a certain threshold of revenue in 2023, Tan added.
Stats About the 2024 Top Companies List
* Benchling
* Coinbase
* Instacart
* SmartAsset
* Zapier
Wave, founded by Drew Durbin and Lincoln Quirk, previously of Sendwave, launched its mobile money product in Senegal in 2018 as a challenger to telcos like Orange and Free Senegal which control 77% of the telco market combined.
During that period, telecommunications companies were imposing transaction fees ranging from 5% to 10%. However, with Wave’s entry into the market, these rates plummeted by up to 70%, accompanied by the introduction of complimentary deposit and withdrawal services through its mobile application.
Wave also brought a flat transaction fee of 1% for peer-to-peer money transfers which was a new standard in the industry. Subsequently, its competitors responded by slashing their prices by up to 80%, and some even restricted their customers from buying airtime through Wave’s mobile app in an attempt to rival Wave’s market dominance.
By 2023, Wave had a user base of 6 million individuals, representing approximately 75% of the adult population in Senegal alone. Its reach extended further across:
accumulating a total of 10 million users.
Notably, in 2022, it processed 12 billion transactions within Senegal alone.
YCombinator boasts 92 African startups in its portfolio, with 3 having joined the latest batch (W24).
A total of 260 companies joined the batch from over 27,000 applications, at least 50% building around AI in one form or another*.*