Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Startups get fired up in Jordan’s rapidly changing environment

The Temple of Hercules in Jordan. Tourism contributed about 15% to GDP in 2023 Unsplash.com/oceaneer
The Temple of Hercules in Jordan. Tourism contributed about 15% to GDP in 2023
  • Jordan one of Middle East’s fastest-growing startup environments
  • Funding for startups grew almost 500% between 2020 and 2021
  • Fintech investment central to country’s economic growth

A decade ago, Jordanian startups were the purview of risk-takers and dreamers. Sensible graduates with a head for business sought positions at banks and corporations, with a steady income and job security.

That mentality is shifting as increased investment and public sector support fuel a vibrant entrepreneurial culture, encouraging more Jordanians to shelve the safe option and pursue their big ideas. 

For Faisal Alarmouti, founder and CEO of delivery platform DoorBox, changes to the business environment in Jordan helped to drive his decision to launch a company this year.

“There has been a significant shift in mindset surrounding the potential for startups to succeed, with a growing number of success stories and a supportive community of entrepreneurs and investors,” he says.

Jordanian startups have established themselves in the regional scene by outperforming expectations given its small market size and limited investment.

Despite receiving only $119 million in startup funding in 2021, Jordan is one of the fastest-growing startup ecosystems in the Middle East, with more than 25 companies listed in the World Economic Forum’s top 100 Arabian startups.

These include Floranow, the Middle East’s first floral online marketplace, Jamalon, the region’s largest online bookstore, and Altibbi, the Middle East’s largest digital health platform.

Ibrahim AlSafadi is founder and CEO of higher education company Luminus Life+, which supports entrepreneurs through its incubator Jordan Start. He believes that a well educated workforce and access to local and international funding have helped to create a “dynamic ecosystem” that makes it a strong location for startups.

Opportunities and investment

According to a recent report from Middle East analyst Magnitt, Jordan recorded almost 500 percent higher startup funding in 2021 than 2020. At the forefront of this is the tech sector.

Industry giants such as Microsoft, Amazon and Cisco have based regional operations in Jordan, testifying to the growing base of talent the country has to offer. 

“With the lack of resources of Jordan, we understood that our people are the most valuable asset, so there was a lot of focus on having people get quality education,” says Rita Shanti, startups selection and engagement manager at Oasis500, which became the region’s first early-stage investor and accelerator when it launched in 2010.

Shanti cites Jordan’s literacy rate of 99.11 percent and a higher education percentage of 40 percent, of which 20 percent are ICT graduates.

Around 27 percent of all tech entrepreneurs in the Mena region are Jordanian, despite the country accounting for about 3 percent of the region’s population.

The Global Competitiveness Report published by the World Economic Forum ranks Jordan 24th out of 141 countries for “ease of finding skilled workers,” but high unemployment remains a significant challenge, as better paid opportunities in the Gulf and elsewhere contribute to a brain drain.

However, recent improvements in the viability of launching a business are giving more Jordanian entrepreneurs a reason to invest their talents at home.

These include the new Jordanian Ministry of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship (MoDEE).

The ministry recently launched a $100 million technology focused venture capital fund in partnership with the Abu Dhabi Developmental Holding Company. 

In addition, a growing number of public-private sector partnerships have created sandbox environments that allow fintech startups to test their products and validate their model before going to market. 

Focus on fintech

Investment in digital services and fintech enterprises is a major part of Jordan’s 2025 national plan to accelerate economic growth and development.

The Information and Communications Technology Association of Jordan says the country’s ICT sector contributes around 14 percent to the country’s GDP, which is one of the highest rates in the region.

Banks and corporations such as telecom companies including Zain and Orange are now incorporating accelerators and incubation programmes into their organisations. But access to funding remains limited.

In Jordan only 10 per cent of all bank and microfinance institution loans go to micro, small and medium-sized enterprises.

Investment in digital services is core to Jordan's growth strategyUnsplash/austindistel
Investment in digital services is core to Jordan’s growth strategy. Picture: Unsplash/austindistel

This is despite MSMEs accounting for more than 99 per cent of all businesses, covering around 70 percent of private sector employment in the Hashemite kingdom.

“The challenge is that a lot of the capital being made available to these entrepreneurs is profit driven first and foremost,” says Karim Samra, founder of Changelabs, a social enterprise accelerator focused on the Middle East and Africa.

“They need to show potential for exists and scalability, expansion and growth. But not all great businesses can do that.”

The new MoDEE fund, for example, will focus on high growth technology companies with proven business models – a tall order for early-stage Jordanian startups that are seeking investment. 

One solution, Samra says, is to lean on non-governmental organisations and charities that are not profit driven to create a blended investment strategy that provides a first round of funding before looking to the private sector for the second tranche. 

Ecommerce is among the most active areas for innovation in Jordanian startups. It covers areas such as consumer payments, invoicing, reporting and accounting, as well as small-scale makers selling items including healthy food lines and natural beauty products.

Logistics, including food and last-mile delivery platforms, is another thriving space for startup innovation, as more Jordanians become comfortable with shopping online.

“Anything to do with enabling people to access credit and to transact online even if they don’t have a bank account is a big trend in Jordan and the broader Middle East,” Samra says.

Latest articles

The SPA report highlighted a number of metrics as being on target, including home ownership of 53.7 percent

Third of Vision 2030 projects ‘completed’ government says

One third of 1,064 planned projects have been completed so far under the Vision 2030 economic transformation plan, the Saudi government said in its annual progress report on the reform programme.   The report also said 561 initiatives were on track, according to the state-owned Saudi Press Agency, publishing its major findings. It was not […]

Tawfik Alzaidi

Saudi director’s labour of love takes the kingdom to Cannes

For the first time a Saudi film has been selected to compete in the Cannes film festival, catapulting its little-known self-taught director into the limelight. Tawfik Alzaidi was so surprised that he’d managed to break through to the big time that he kept the news that his film Norah had been accepted for the ‘Un […]

Migrants attempting to reach Italy from Tunisia. About 270,000 so-called irregular migrants arrived in the EU via sea crossings last year

EU reveals total aid to North Africa to combat migration 

The European Union provided €673 million ($718 million) in funding to four North African countries from 2021-23 to help the quartet reduce what it calls irregular migration to the 27-member bloc, official data shows. Last year about 270,000 “irregular migrants” arrived in the EU via sea crossings, 64 percent more than in 2022. Crossings from […]

Joby Aviation's CEO JoeBen Bevirt (2nd left) at the signing of a multilateral agreement with the three Abu Dhabi government departments

Abu Dhabi signs multiple deals to launch air taxi services in 2025

A commute from Abu Dhabi to Dubai could take only 30 minutes next year, with the introduction of air taxi services significantly slashing travel time between the emirates. The electric aircraft manufacturer Joby Aviation signed agreements this week with Abu Dhabi’s Department of Municipalities and Transport, Department of Economic Development and Department of Culture and […]