Lagos, Nigeria – May 8, 2026 – BFREE, a pan-African distressed retail and SME investor, today announced the close of a growth round that substantially expands BFREE’s capacity to acquire non-performing loan portfolios, deepen its forward flow partnerships with financial institutions, and extend its presence into new markets across the continent.
AfricInvest led the round through its Financial Inclusion Vehicle (FIVE), a growth-oriented evergreen investment fund dedicated to advancing financial inclusion across Africa. Alongside capital, FIVE brings an established network of financial institutions, deep expertise in the financial sector, and a strong track record of backing high-growth businesses in African markets.
Algebra Ventures joined as a new institutional investor, marking its first investment in a Nigeria-headquartered company. Existing investors Capria Ventures, VestedWorld, Axian CVC, Angaza Capital, 4Di Capital, and DotExe Ventures also participated, alongside a select group of strategic individual investors with deep expertise in African financial services.
BFREE was founded to address a gap that had long constrained African credit markets. For most lenders, non-performing unsecured retail and SME loans had no practical resolution pathway: legal recovery was rarely viable given the economics, leaving institutions to write off these assets and carry them indefinitely. Portfolio sales to dedicated purchasers barely existed.
BFREE began as a technology-led collection servicer and developed over time into an institutional-grade portfolio purchaser, acquiring distressed unsecured credit across the full spectrum from nano loans to SME facilities. Across more than 35 closed transactions and a portfolio of over 10 million borrower accounts, the company has accumulated what is likely one of the most extensive proprietary datasets of distressed unsecured borrowers on the continent outside of the credit bureau ecosystem.
This data foundation underpins both its underwriting discipline and the high degree of confidence it brings to the return profiles it commits to.
“The market opportunity is significantly larger than the infrastructure historically available to address it. This round puts us in a position to pursue substantially larger portfolio acquisitions, engage a broader range of institutional partners, and do so with the speed and certainty of execution that serious counterparties demand,” said Julian Flosbach, CEO at BFREE.
Beyond one-off acquisitions, BFREE structures forward flow arrangements with financial institutions, committing to acquire newly non-performing accounts on a recurring basis. These partnerships offer lenders a consistent, long-term solution to distressed credit rather than a series of one-off transactions, and they are built on a foundation of borrower engagement that prioritises transparency and realistic repayment structures, on the conviction that responsible resolution produces stronger outcomes for all parties over time.
BFREE’s technology-enabled collections model prioritises ethical, non-coercive engagement, helping borrowers deleverage responsibly while rebuilding trust in the financial system. Unlike traditional recovery approaches reliant on intimidation and public shaming, BFREE’s approach to borrower engagement is built on responsible practices applied consistently across the firm, its borrowers, and its partners.
This approach has proved commercially sound: BFREE’s recovery performance has consistently met or exceeded its own targets, and its standing as an ethical resolution partner has strengthened its relationships with the financial institutions from which it acquires portfolios.
“BFREE’s approach to credit management, based on a unique set of proprietary data and a technology-enabled collection platform, closes an essential gap in the digital lending value chain. High-velocity digital lending has become a core product across markets, with financial institutions, banks and fintechs alike requiring effective ways to manage small ticket non-performing loans.
BFREE’s execution-driven team has brought the platform to an inflection point, which will enable them to purchase larger portfolios and become a prime partner for banks and fintechs across African markets,” said Patrick Herrmann, Partner at AfricInvest.
Algebra Ventures brings to the round a strong network across African and Middle Eastern credit markets, alongside direct experience backing technology-driven financial services businesses. The firm’s view of the structural opportunity in African distressed debt, and its conviction in the quality of BFREE’s execution, made this a natural extension of its pan-African investment strategy.
“Billions of dollars in African retail and SME credit go unresolved every year because the institutional infrastructure to clear them simply does not exist. Healthy credit markets need a disciplined buyer for distressed debt.
The founders Julian, Moses and Chukwudi have built a platform that combines rigorous portfolio pricing, risk management, and deep data infrastructure to clear distressed retail and SME debt at scale. We are backing them together with AfricInvest to scale BFREE across Africa and beyond,” said Omar Khashaba, General Partner at Algebra Ventures.
Capital from the round will be deployed across both existing and new markets, supporting larger portfolio acquisitions, deeper forward flow partnerships, and entry into additional markets where the structural conditions for BFREE’s model are clearly present.

