Quantum hardware is the physical foundation of next-generation computing, things like qubits, photonic chips, quantum sensors, and experimental devices.
In Africa, no company yet claims to be manufacturing full-scale quantum processors. But several early-stage startups and initiatives are emerging, exploring quantum-inspired systems, quantum education, and research-driven hardware ambitions.
Here are the top 5 quantum-hardware-oriented initiatives in Africa as of Q4 2025, based on publicly verifiable activity:
— EntangledX (Pan-Africa): Markets itself as Africa’s first quantum-physics startup. Their website reveals big ideas around quantum research, but they haven’t launched any commercial quantum hardware just yet. Their work is still under development.
— Cassava Technologies + Entanglement Inc. (Pan-Africa): A partnership between an African tech infrastructure company and a U.S.-based quantum firm. They focus on quantum-inspired compute, AI, and security, not actual qubit-based hardware yet.
— Quantum Analytics (Nigeria): A startup focused on education and training in quantum computing and information science. They don’t build quantum machines; they help build the next generation of quantum thinkers.
— African Quantum Consortium – AQC (Pan-Africa): A network created to coordinate quantum research, policy, and education across Africa. It’s not building hardware; it’s building the ecosystem.
— OneQuantum Africa (Pan-Africa): A community-driven group. Their mission is to grow quantum education, research, and collaboration, not to manufacture quantum chips or build a quantum computer.
These five initiatives show that, for now, Africa’s quantum hardware scene is more about ideas and research than manufacturing.
No commercial quantum processors are being mass-produced yet, but the conversation is real, and these groups are laying the groundwork for a future where quantum devices on the continent might become a reality.
Image Credit: Freepik


