Rwanda has the highest percentage of women in parliament globally (61%) and one of Africa’s highest rates of female entrepreneurship. But women-owned businesses still face specific challenges: access to capital, networking gaps, and time constraints from disproportionate household responsibilities.
Here are the resources specifically designed to support women entrepreneurs in Rwanda.
Funding and finance
- BDF Women Entrepreneurship Fund — dedicated credit guarantee facility for women-owned businesses
- Bank of Kigali’s Women Banking — specific financial products for women entrepreneurs with preferential rates
- USAID W-GDP — Women’s Global Development and Prosperity Initiative — grants and technical assistance
- African Women’s Development Fund — grants for women-led organisations
- Umurenge SACCOs — accessible microfinance at the sector level, with women’s groups often getting preferential treatment
Networks and associations
- Rwanda Women’s Network (RWN) — advocacy, training, and networking
- AWEIF (Africa Women Economic Integration Forum) — annual conference in Kigali
- Women in Business Rwanda — networking and mentorship platform
- PSF Women’s Chamber — Private Sector Federation’s dedicated women’s business chamber
- SheLeadsAfrica — pan-African community with Rwanda presence
Training and incubation
- Impact Hub Kigali — incubator with women-focused programmes
- Norrsken Kigali — co-working and impact hub with mentorship access
- Inkomoko — business development services with strong women’s programming
- Digital Opportunity Trust — digital skills training for women entrepreneurs
Going digital
One of the biggest opportunities for women entrepreneurs is digital tools that save time — time that’s often stretched thin between business and family:
- A website works 24/7 while you’re handling other responsibilities
- Professional email makes your business look established from day one
- Online booking reduces time spent answering phone calls
- Social media scheduled in advance means marketing happens even when you’re busy
Rwanda’s commitment to gender equality in business isn’t just rhetoric — there are real resources available. Take advantage of them.