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5 African Billionaires Enter the World’s Top 500 Rich List at Start of 2026

A few Africans are listed among the world’s 500 richest people. Even with global markets remaining unpredictable, Africa’s richest individuals have opened the year with resilient businesses and, in some cases, fast-moving valuations that keep them visible on the world’s richest list.

But their relevance goes beyond net-worth rankings. These individuals sit at the intersection of capital, production, jobs, and long-term economic reform. 

The companies they own or influence employ hundreds of thousands of people directly and support millions more through supply chains, suppliers, contractors, distributors, logistics providers, and service partners.

In economies where unemployment is a persistent pressure point, especially among young people, these job ecosystems can stabilise communities, raise household incomes, and broaden government revenue through taxes and corporate activity.

Here are the five Africans on the list at the start of 2026.

Aliko Dangote (Nigeria) — $30.4bn, 80th in the world

Aliko Dangote is still the richest person in Africa. Most of his wealth comes from large industries like cement and other big manufacturing businesses. His companies employ many people and supply materials that support construction and development. His growing interest in refining and petrochemicals also matters because it can help Nigeria reduce fuel imports and keep more value inside the country.

Johann Rupert & family (South Africa) — $19.7bn, 135th in the world

Johann Rupert’s wealth is linked mainly to global consumer and luxury goods businesses. This kind of wealth often rises and falls with how global markets are doing and how much people are spending. His position shows that African business leaders can also succeed strongly in international markets, not only in natural resources or heavy industry.

Nicky Oppenheimer (South Africa) — $14.0bn, 223rd in the world

Nicky Oppenheimer’s wealth is connected to mining and long-term investments built from the resources sector. Mining is still one of the biggest ways wealth is made in Africa. It also brings export earnings and supports many jobs, even though it can be strongly affected by global commodity prices.

Naguib Sawiris (Egypt) — $10.7bn, 326th in the world

Naguib Sawiris is known for business interests in telecoms and investments. Telecoms are important because they support internet access, mobile services, business growth, and even banking through mobile money and digital payments. His place on the list shows how strong the digital and communications sector has become in Africa.

Abdulsamad Rabiu (Nigeria) — $10.4bn, 342nd in the world

Abdulsamad Rabiu’s wealth comes mainly from big industrial businesses, including cement and other products linked to construction and manufacturing. These industries are important because they support building projects, create jobs, and can help reduce imports by producing more goods locally.

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