Blockchain isn’t just for crypto, in Africa, it’s changing how goods move. From farms to factories, blockchain supply-chain tech tracks every step, cuts fraud, and makes trade more transparent.
These companies are turning complex logistics into reliable, traceable, and efficient systems across the continent.
Here are the Top 5 Blockchain Supply Chain Companies in Africa (Q4 2025) — verified and active:
— Binkabi (Nigeria / UK-Africa operations): A blockchain-powered commodities trading network that tokenizes agricultural produce and enables secure trade settlement for farmers, aggregators, and commodity exchanges across Africa.
— DataLedger South Africa (South Africa): A supply-chain platform combining IoT sensors and blockchain to provide traceability for food logistics, agritech, and cold-chain operations. Used by producers and distributors who need real-time, tamper-proof tracking.
— Domineum (Nigeria / Sierra Leone): Provides blockchain-backed logistics and record-verification systems. Works with governments and enterprises on procurement tracking, cargo documentation, and traceability for public-sector supply chains.
— AgriLedger (Kenya / Global): A blockchain platform that gives farmers transparent supply-chain records, enabling traceability and fairer pricing for crops. It reduces middleman fraud and helps cooperatives verify transactions across the chain.
— Chekkit Technologies (Nigeria): A blockchain-based verification and supply-chain tracking solution used in FMCG and pharmaceuticals. Their system tracks products from factory to consumer using tamper-proof QR codes and blockchain-backed audit trails.
These five companies are turning blockchain into real supply-chain tools across Africa. From crops and commodities to FMCG and government logistics, they’re proving that transparency and trust can be built directly into the movement of goods.
List was selected from Africa-based organisations with real blockchain supply-chain deployments, validated through product documentation, news reports, and public case studies across agritech, FMCG, and logistics.
Image Credit: Freepik


