There is a quiet revolution happening in how the world discovers and buys African made goods. At the centre of it is Afrikart, a rising e-commerce marketplace that is doing more than selling products. It is exporting stories, heritage, and the unmistakable genius of African craftsmanship to a global audience hungry for authenticity.
From organic shea butter cold pressed in the Savanna belt to handmade Zambian silver jewelry, kente woven accessories from Ghana, and specialty coffee harvested on Malawi's highland plateaus, Afrikart is building the digital infrastructure that connects Africa's most talented makers to customers everywhere.
A Marketplace Born from a Movement
Afrikart was not founded simply to sell things. It was created, as its own story goes, by Africans who recognised a glaring gap, gifted artisans and innovative brands across the continent were producing extraordinary goods, but struggling to find customers beyond their local markets. The platform emerged as a direct answer to that frustration.
Its mission is stated with striking clarity, to spotlight the creativity, skill, and cultural depth found across African communities, offering a space where meaningful products are discovered and celebrated by customers seeking authenticity. Every item on the platform carries a narrative, shaped by the artisan's technique, the traditions influencing the design, and the ideas that make each product uniquely African.
Today, Afrikart hosts vendors from across the continent, Nigeria, Ghana, Zambia, Kenya, Malawi, Senegal, and beyond, alongside brands from African descended communities worldwide. It is, in every sense, a pan-African stage.