The African market is more dynamic and attractive for international investment than ever before. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has created a $3.4 trillion common market of 1.3 billion people.
Expansion here is no longer about chasing one-off opportunities. It’s about building regional strategies, anchored by the right hub with scale and sustainability built in.
That was the central theme of our “Choosing Your African Hub” AMA webinar, led by Girish Prayag, Manager, Entity Management at GoGlobal.
“Gone are the days when Africa expansion meant picking one country and hoping for the best,” Girish explains. “Today’s investors think regionally, using hubs to unlock multiple markets while managing risk and maximizing opportunity.”
From the discussion, five countries stood out as the most strategic hubs for companies ready to expand: Mauritius, Kenya, Rwanda, Morocco and South Africa.
The strategic shift: from resource play to regional hub
The old Africa playbook was simple. Extract resources. Export raw materials. Repeat.
The new directive is smarter though. Build regional operations. Use strategic hubs. Access multiple markets while optimizing for stability, infrastructure and tax efficiency.
This is how global companies are moving, according to Girish. It’s not opportunistic. Not reactive. The approach is strategic, structured and ready to scale.
The AfCFTA is a main driver. It eliminates tariffs across most goods and services, unlocking unprecedented access. But, as Girish explains, you need a hub strategy if you’re serious about investing in Africa.
Five hubs anchoring business expansion in Africa
Not every market in Africa works as a hub. Plenty offer opportunity, but only a handful give you the mix of tax efficiency, speed, infrastructure and scale needed for sustainable growth.
“Choosing your hub isn’t about what looks good on paper—it’s about what accelerates your regional strategy without creating roadblocks.,” Girish emphasizes.
With that being said, five countries consistently rise to the top of the list for international companies when it comes to investing in Africa: Mauritius, Kenya, Rwanda, Morocco and South Africa.
They don’t compete with each other, with each playing different roles in Africa’s growth story. But here’s how they stack up:
| Country | Best For | Key Advantages | The Catch |
| Mauritius: The Investment Gateway |
Holding companies, treasury, Africa-wide investment structures |
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Must prove substance: employ suitably qualified staff, must incur minimum expenditure proportionate to level of activities |
| Kenya: The East African Command Center |
Regional HQs, consumer-facing operations, logistics |
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Bank account setup can add a month. Plan for delays. |
| Rwanda: The Speed Champion |
Quick entry, international HQs, pilots |
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Incentive applications must be precise and filed upfront. |
| Morocco: The Europe-Africa Bridge |
Manufacturing, exports, Europe-North Africa trade |
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Incorporation takes 3 weeks to 3 months, manager need to be in the country to complete formalities. The setup timeframe is dependent on the company’s ownership complexity |
| South Africa: The Scale Play |
Large-scale operations, advanced industries |
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Exchange controls slow profit repatriation. Regulatory layers limit tax efficiency. |
The tax incentive reality
Every hub promotes its tax incentives loudly. But the reality is more complex. Incentives look great on paper—until you hit the fine print of eligibility, timelines and compliance.
As Girish put it: “Tax incentives can accelerate your strategy but only if you meet every condition. Miss one detail and the advantage disappears.”
Here’s how the five hubs stack up on tax incentives versus tax reality:
| Country | Headline Incentive | Real Advantage | The Reality Check |
| Mauritius | 15% corporate tax, exemptions to ~3% | Ultra-low effective rates; 46+ double taxation treaties; no capital gains or dividend withholding | Must prove genuine substance: directors, staff, core income-generating activity in-country |
| Kenya | SEZ corporate tax: 10% (10 yrs), 15% (next 10 yrs) | Significant tax savings vs. 30% standard rate | Incorporation is fast, but banking often delays operations by 4–6 weeks |
| Rwanda | 0% corporate tax for international HQs; 7-year tax holidays | Fastest route to market with real savings on corporate income | Incentives require upfront application and precise documentation; errors kill eligibility |
| Morocco | 5-year tax holiday in free zones; 17.5% tax for exporters | Strong incentives for manufacturers and exporters with Europe access | Incorporation can take 3 weeks–3 months; an in-country manager is usually required |
| South Africa | 15% corporate tax in approved SEZs | Scale-ready jurisdiction with advanced banking and legal systems | Exchange controls restrict profit repatriation; holding structures remain tax inefficient |
The hidden complexity: employment law
Entity choice is just the first step. Employment compliance can make or break your launch.
As Girish warns: “Ignore employment law at your peril. Contracts, contributions and working hours aren’t just paperwork in Africa. They’re the rules of survival.”
Here’s how the five hubs compare:
| Country | Contracts | Statutory Contributions | Working Hours | Key Risk |
| Mauritius | Written contracts required | Multiple funds: National Pension, National Savings, Training Levy | 45 hrs/week; overtime at premium | Missed fund payments are flagged quickly by regulators |
| Kenya | Contracts must define duties, pay, hours, dispute process | NSSF (pension) + NHIF (health) + PAYE tax | 45 hrs/week; overtime mandatory | Non-compliance risks fines + worker disputes |
| Rwanda | Digital contracts valid | Mandatory social security contributions | 45 hrs/week cap; overtime regulated | Precision required—errors in contracts weaken enforcement |
| Morocco | Collective agreements can override contracts | CNSS covers social security, retirement, healthcare | 44 hrs/week; overtime rules vary by sector | Failure to align contracts with collective agreements can invalidate key clauses |
| South Africa | Detailed written contracts are essential | UIF, PAYE, Skills Development Levy | 45 hrs/week; strong labor protections | Dismissals or disputes are heavily regulated; courts favor employees |
A framework for choosing your hub
Expanding into Africa isn’t guesswork. It’s a series of deliberate, strategic decisions.
Girish gives the following advice: “Your hub choice, tax structure and labor compliance all need to align with your long-term objectives. Start with the end in mind.”
Here’s a structured approach to getting it right:
1. Define Your End Goal
- Holding structure → Mauritius
- Regional operations → Kenya
- Speed to market/pilot → Rwanda
- Manufacturing & export → Morocco
- Scale operations / advanced industries → South Africa
Tip from Girish: “Don’t pick a country because it sounds good. Pick it because it serves your strategy.”
2. Map Your Timeline
Tax incentives are powerful. But execution matters more than promise. Consider the following:
| Country | Typical Incorporation | Banking | Incentive Application |
| Mauritius | 5–10 days | Fast | Substance required upfront |
| Kenya | 2–4 weeks | +1 month | SEZ registration is required to access incentives |
| Rwanda | <1 week | Fastest | Incentives need early filing |
| Morocco | 3 weeks–3 months | Standard | Manager presence may be required |
| South Africa | 4–12 weeks | Complex | SEZ approval needed |
Insight: Some hubs deliver speed, others scale. Which is more important for your launch? Factor this into your phased rollout.
3. Ensure Substance & Compliance
- Entity Requirements: Directors, local staff, registered office
- Labor Law Compliance: Written contracts, contributions, working hours
- Tax Compliance: Incentive filings, profit repatriation rules
Girish’s advice: “Skipping these details is the fastest way to kill momentum. Compliance isn’t optional. It’s foundational.”
4. Decide Your Entry Model
| Model | Pros | Cons | When to Use |
| Employer of Record (EOR) | Fast, low risk | Limited control | Test-market, hire quickly |
| Representative Office | Minimal setup | Cannot generate revenue | Research-only operations |
| Branch Office | Operational authority | Parent liable | Short-term regional presence |
| Subsidiary/Entity | Local autonomy, limited liability | Resource-intensive | Long-term operations and scale |
A note from Girish: “Most international companies start lean with an EOR, then transition to a subsidiary once operations demand it.”
5. Plan Phased Growth
- Start lean → EOR or minimal presence to validate market
- Scale deliberately → Establish subsidiary or SEZ operations
- Consolidate → Align hubs for tax efficiency, cross-border flows and regional oversight
Your Africa advantage: structure, scale, success
Africa is no longer a patchwork of isolated opportunities. It’s a high-stakes, interconnected market where speed, scale and structure win.
The countries aren’t rivals when it comes to choosing your hub. They’re strategic tools that can complement your approach. Used together, they are rewriting the playbook for continental growth.
As Girish says, “The companies winning in Africa today aren’t chasing one-off deals. They build integrated regional strategies, aligned with their business objectives.”
Expansion here rewards bold, smart action. Not improvisation. Not shortcuts. When you get your hub, tax and compliance right, Africa becomes a launchpad few regions can match.
Want to dive deeper into Africa expansion strategies? Connect with our regional experts who’ve helped hundreds of companies successfully establish their presence across the continent.