Africa’s wealth story is no longer just about how fortunes are made; it is increasingly about how they are preserved and transferred across generations.
- +See 10 family offices owned by Africa’s richest people
As the continent’s billionaire class expands, so too does the need for institutional-grade wealth management.
As the continent’s billionaire class expands, so too does the need for institutional-grade wealth management.
Data from Henley & Partners shows Africa is home to more than 120,000 millionaires and about two dozen billionaires, with private wealth projected to grow by over 60% in the next decade.
This surge is quietly driving the rise of family offices’ exclusive investment vehicles that now sit at the heart of Africa’s most powerful fortunes.
At its core, a family office is a privately controlled entity that manages the wealth of ultra-high-net-worth individuals. But in practice, it functions more like a personal investment firm.
From portfolio management and private equity deals to estate planning, philanthropy, and succession strategy, family offices centralize control over wealth in a way traditional banks cannot. They typically operate either as single-family offices dedicated to one dynasty or multi-family platforms serving a network of wealthy clients.
In volatile markets, family offices provide insulation, allowing capital to be deployed globally, hedged against currency risks, and invested with a long-term horizon.
More importantly, they institutionalize wealth, ensuring that fortunes built in sectors like oil, cement, telecoms, and finance do not dissipate across generations.
Beyond wealth preservation, these entities are becoming influential capital allocators. In markets where institutional funding remains limited, family offices are stepping in to back startups, fund expansion projects, and support philanthropy at scale.
In effect, they are evolving into silent engines of economic influence, bridging capital gaps while reinforcing legacy.
Here are 10 notable family offices owned by Africa’s richest individuals.
Long before family offices became fashionable among Africa’s billionaire class, Theophilus Danjuma had already institutionalized his wealth through a globally oriented platform.
Established in 2011 and headquartered in Surrey, England, the TY Danjuma Family Office serves as the central hub for managing the fortune of the retired general-turned-oil magnate and his family. Designed as a single-family office, it oversees a diversified, multi-asset portfolio spanning public markets, private equity, real estate, and alternative investments.
What sets the Danjuma structure apart is its global architecture. While oversight sits in the UK, core investment management is executed through a regulated fund manager in Singapore. The office also maintains deep relationships with global banks, fund managers, and advisory firms.
Through the TY Danjuma Foundation and the MBA Scholarship program, the family office has funded dozens of African students at elite institutions, including Harvard, INSEAD, and Wharton. Complementing its financial assets is Danjuma Collection Ltd, a curated portfolio of over 500 contemporary artworks.
