Absa and GirlCode empower young women in technology across Africa through GirlCodeHack 2025
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Absa, in partnership with GirlCode, concluded the 11th edition of the annual GirlCodeHack hackathon on 12 October 2025. The 30-hour hackathon brought together young women from eight African cities – Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam, and Gaborone – under the theme “Future-Proofing Africa: Innovation at the Intersection of FinTech, Cybersecurity, and AI.
This marks the second year that Absa has sponsored the Africa leg of the hackathon and this year, the partnership expanded significantly, growing from three countries in 2024 to five in 2025, reflecting Absa’s ongoing commitment to empowering women in technology across the continent.
“It was truly inspiring to witness how participants tackled the same challenge from diverse angles, each bringing fresh insights and bold, innovative thinking. This is the power of inclusive innovation. At Absa, we believe that empowering women in tech and embracing diverse perspectives is not just a value, it’s a catalyst for meaningful change across Africa’s tech landscape.” says Tamu Dutuma, Head of Strategy and Transformation, Technology – Absa Regional Operations.
Celebrating innovation across Africa
Each host city recognised standout projects demonstrating creativity, technical skill, and impact potential:
·Johannesburg: TechGurlies developed FinLit GPT, a solution addressing youth debt by promoting financial literacy and empowering better money decisions.
·Cape Town: Ndlela created AI Career Coach, an intelligent platform that offers personalised career and upskilling guidance.
·Durban: CyberShield Africa designed Rural Cyber App, a tool raising cybersecurity awareness in rural communities.
·Kenya: Avytria developed Jasho, a daily income tracker for entrepreneurs using voice and facial recognition.
·Uganda: Code Force introduced Teleka, a student savings app helping users organise and invest their money.
·Botswana: CredilQ built an AI-powered credit intelligence platform bridging the gap between SMEs and financial institutions.
·Tanzania: Tokiva Sisters developed PayNest, a biometric budgeting and payment app that unifies multiple digital wallets into one secure system.
·Ghana: Locked In launched a digital savings platform modernising Africa’s traditional “susu” and group savings methods.
The grand prize of R100,000 was awarded to Tokiva Sisters from Tanzania for their innovative financial management platform.
“Tokiva Sisters impressed with a forward-thinking solution aimed at empowering young people to take charge of their finances,” said Zandile Mkwanazi, CEO of GirlCode. “Their creativity, skills, and dedication show the remarkable talent young women are bringing to tech. It’s exciting to see their project’s potential for real-world impact.”
GirlCodeHack’s continental reach continues to grow each year, promoting collaboration across borders and demonstrating how diversity accelerates innovation.
“This year’s hackathon showed exactly how collaboration drives innovation,” added Mkwanazi. “Young women built skills, confidence, and networks that will continue long after the event, perfectly illustrating our goal of expanding access and representation in tech.”
As GirlCode accelerates its mission to empower 10 million women and girls with tech skills by 2030, Absa remains steadfast in its commitment to driving diversity and inclusion in technology, ensuring that more women across Africa not only participate but lead in shaping the future of the industry.
“We’re incredibly proud to be part of this journey,” concludes Dutuma. “Our partnership with GirlCode is about creating access, representation, and opportunities for young women to thrive in technology. This work is important to us, and we hope to extend our impact to more countries in the future, as we continue exploring ways to support initiatives that foster meaningful and inclusive innovation across Africa.”
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