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21 African Women on Forbes Africa’s 2026 Over 30 Under 50 List

African Women Doing Big, Big Things.
African Women on Forbes Africa’s 2026 Over 30 Under 50 List African Women on Forbes Africa’s 2026 Over 30 Under 50 List
Credit: Afrikaworld/teenvogue/dazed

Among Forbes Africa’s most anticipated recognitions is the “Over 30 Under 50” list. A category dedicated to established professionals who have moved beyond early-career promise and are now firmly influencing policy, business, entertainment, technology, finance, and social development across Africa.

Unlike other popularity-based rankings, Forbes Africa’s selections are guided by impact, industry influence, leadership track record, innovation, and continental relevance and potential. Honourees are usually sourced by public submissions, alumni referrals and internal reporting.  They must be individuals whose work extends beyond personal success to measurable societal or economic contribution.

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The 2026 edition shines a spotlight on African women who are redefining leadership across different sectors. 

Here are the African women featured on the 2026 “Over 30 Under 50”. Forbes Africa list:

1. Ayo Edebiri – 30, Nigeria

Fumilayo Edebiri is a Golden Globe, Screen Actors Guild, and Primetime Emmy Award winner.

2. Dineo Lioma – 35, South Africa

Dineo is the co-founder and CEO of Deep Medical Therapeutics. 

3. Eloho Omame – 40, Nigeria

Founder of FirstCheck Africa, she supports high-impact entrepreneurs scaling transformative businesses across Africa.

4. DR Lungile Mhlongo – 37, South Africa

Medical doctor, founder and CEO of Numa Skin. She also holds a diploma in aesthetic medicine.

5. Kudakwashe Maradzika – 39, Zimbabwe

Kudakwashe Maradzika
Credit: Glamour South Africa

The Zimbabwean is a writer, producer, and founder of Lincoln Green Media. 

6.Celeste Ntuli – 46, South Africa

Award-winning comedian and actress. She is known as one of South Africa’s most influential female voices in comedy.

7. Vivian Onano – 34, Kenya

Vivian is an international policy expert and youth advocate. She is globally recognised for advancing gender equality and education for girls. She is the founder of Leading Light Initiative.

8. Mandisa Radebe (DBN Gogo) – 32, South Africa

Acclaimed DJ and Amapiano tastemaker shaping South Africa’s global music influence.

9. Miranda Naiman – 42, Tanzania

She is a cultural strategist and creative entrepreneur spotlighting African arts and storytelling.

10. Mary Vilakazi – 40+, South Africa

Mary is a corporate executive and financial leader serving in top roles at FirstRand and driving innovative transformation in banking.

11. Sonia Mugabo – 35, Rwanda

Credit: The Benchmark

The Rwandan is the founder of the Kigali-based fashion brand Haute Baso, redefining contemporary African luxury fashion.

12. Pelonomi Moiloa – 33, South Africa

Tech entrepreneur and founder of Lelapa AI, building African-focused artificial intelligence solutions.

13. Akhona Makalima – 37, South Africa

Trailblazing football referee, one of the few women officiating top-tier men’s matches in South Africa.

14. Maureen Bandari – 37, Kenya

Maureen, an award-winning entrepreneur, aesthetician and founder of Bandari Beauty.

15. Amaarae – 31, Ghana

Credit: The Nation Newspaper

Ama Serwah Genfi is a genre-blending singer and songwriter pushing African alté and pop to international audiences.

ALSO READ: 5 African Women Who Made Forbes’ Most Powerful Women In The World List

16. Yvonne Anuli Orji – 42, Nigeria

Actress and comedian best known for her breakout role as Molly in HBO’s Insecure.

17. Angeline Murimirwa – 46, Zimbabwe

Angeline is an education advocate and CEO of Camfed Africa, championing girls’ access to education.

18. Zolani Mahola – 44, South Africa

Former lead singer of Freshlyground and now a storyteller and children’s author celebrating African identity. She goes under stage name, One Who Sings.

19. Aisha Sulaiman – 38, Nigeria

Aisha Sulaiman is the founder and CEO of Royal Pearls Resources Limited.

20. Judith Owigar – 41, Kenya

Tech leader and co-founder of AkiraChix, empowering African women in technology. She is known for promoting gender diversity in the African technology sector.

21. Yetty Williams – 47, Nigeria

Founder of LagosMums, Yetty is building a digital community supporting modern Nigerian mothers.









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