- On average, the continent’s billionaires are worth $4.7 billion now compared to the $3.4 billion in 2014
- Aliko’s wealth has been increasing exponentially, from $10.1 billion in 2020, $12.1 billion in 2021, and 13.9 billion in 2022
- Nigerian Abdulsamad’s worth has risen from $3.1 billion in2020 to $7 billion in 2022, arguably the best performer on the list.
The African economy is not doing so well. But that does not mean so are all the people on the continent!
Aliko Dangote, a business magnate in Nigeria, has topped the 2022 Forbes list of the richest men in Africa for the eleventh consecutive time.
Despite the Coronavirus pandemic, the continent’s 18 billionaires’ combined worth is 15 per cent more than it was in 2021, standing at roughly $84.9 billion.
On average, the continent’s billionaires are worth $4.7 billion now compared to the $3.4 billion in 2014.
Soaring stock prices across sub-Saharan Africa have lifted the worth of these business moguls. These tycoons’ industries cut across manufacturing, construction and engineering, telecoms, mining, fashion and retail, food and beverages, media, banking and insurance, and investments, among other diversified sources.
Read: Africa’s Manufacturing Sector Resilient Despite Tough Challenges: Expert
Here is a list of the 18 billionaires in Africa as ranked by net worth.
- Aliko Dangote

Dangote told Forbes that his business drive came from his grandfather, successful rice and oats farmer. He said that he would buy sweets, give them to his peers to sell when he was young, and keep the profits. Quite ambitious!
2. Johan Rupert and family.

Johan Ruppert is the chairman of Compagnie Financiere Richemont, a Swiss luxury goods firm that deals in fashion and retail.
Rupert’s origin of wealth comes from diamond mining.
He has shares in the Anthonij Rupert Wines (named after his deceased brother) and Saracens English rugby team. The 71-year-old says his biggest regret in life was not buying half of Gucci when the opportunity arose at just $175 million.
3. Nicky Oppenheimer and family

The South African, heir to his family’s fortune, cemented his position in the billionaires’ club in 2012 when he sold off 40 per cent of his share in the diamond firm De Beers to Anglo American for $5.1 billion.
Oppenheimer started Johannesburg-based Fireblade Aviation in 2014, which operates charter flights with its fleet of four planes and two helicopters. He also owns 720 square miles of conservation land across South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana.
4. Nassef Sawiris

The origin of his wealth has come mainly from chemicals, construction, and engineering. The Sawiris is the wealthiest family in Egypt. His brother Naguib Sawiris is also making it to this list.
The family split Orascom Construction Limited into two entities, with Nassef running the OCI entity, one of the world’s largest nitrogen fertiliser producers.
The 60-year-old sits on the supervisory board of Adidas. He also has shares in the cement giant Lafarge Holcim.
5. Abdulsamad Rabiu.

The 61-year-old is the founder of BUA Group in Nigeria, a conglomerate active in cement production, sugar refining, and real estate.
6. Mike Adenuga

His mobile phone network, Globacom, is the third-largest operator in Nigeria, with over 60 million subscribers. His oil exploration company, Conoil Producing, operates six oil blocks in the Niger Delta.
7. Issad Rebrab and Family

He has built his wealth through the food and beverage industry. Cevital owns one of the largest sugar refineries globally, producing two million tonnes every year.
8. Naguib Sawiris

He has built his fortune in telecom, selling Orascom Telecom in 2011 to Russian telecom firm VimpelCom (now Veon) in a multibillion-dollar transaction.
Through his Media Globe Holdings, Naguib Sawiris owns 88 per cent of pan-European pay-TV and video news network Euronews. He also developed a luxury resort called Silversands on the Caribbean Island of Grenada.
9. Patrice Motsepe

Motsepe became a billionaire in 2008. His net worth has increased from $2.6 billion in 2020 to $3.1 billion in 2022. He was the first African on the Forbes list.
Metals and mining have sustained his wealth. He is the founder and chairman of African Rainbow Minerals. The company is under his equity firm, African Rainbow Capital, which focuses on investing in Africa.
Patrice Motsepe also has a stake in Sanlam, a listed financial services firm, and owns the Mamelodi Sundowns Football Club. In 1997, he bought low-producing gold mine shafts and later became profitable.
He was the first black partner at Bowman Gilfillan, a law firm in Johannesburg,
10. Koos Becker

The 69-year-old revolutionised Naspers, a South African newspaper publisher, into an eCommerce investor and cable TV powerhouse. His most significant and most profitable bet led Naspers to invest in Tencent, a Chinese Internet and Media firm.
However, Becker sold more than 70 per cent of his Naspers shares.
10. Strive Masiyiwa

His wealth has been mainly contributed to by the success of his mobile phone network, Econet Wireless Zimbabwe. He owns over 50 per cent of the network.
He also owns half of Liquid Telecom, which offers fibre optics and satellite services to telecom firms across the continent.
His assets extend to mobile networks in Lesotho and Burundi, Africa’s fintech investments and power distribution firms.
12. Mohamed Mansour

Mansour Group also holds exclusive rights for Caterpillar equipment distribution in Egypt and seven other countries. Mohamed served as Egypt’s Minister of Transportation from 2006 to 2009 under the Hosni Mubarak regime.
13. Aziz Akhannouch and Family

Akwa Group deals with petroleum, gas and chemicals. Aziz is the Minister of Agriculture and fisheries in Morocco.
Read: Morocco named top car manufacturing hub in Africa, beats South Africa
14. Michiel Le Roux
![Africa's richest men who became richer in a pandemic 14 Michiel Le Roux. [Photo/Business Live]](https://theexchange.africa/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Michiel-Le-Roux.-Business-Live-350x350.jpg)
15. Othman Benjelloun and Family

Benjelloun built RMA into a leading insurance company in Morocco. Through his holding company FinanceCom, he has a stake in the Moroccan arm of French telecom firm Orange. His wealth has been driven by finance and investments.
15. Mohammed Dewji

MeTL operates in more than six African countries, and the CEO is eyeing expanding to several others. Mohammed signed the Giving Pledge in 2016, promising to donate at least half his fortune to philanthropic causes.
15. Youssef Mansour

He oversees the consumer goods division, including supermarket chain Metro, and sole distribution rights for L’Oreal in Egypt.
18. Yassen Mansour

We are looking forward to the next year to see whether there will be new faces on the billionaires’ list in Arica.
Read: Yasseen Mansour | Net Worth |Africa’s Billionaire | Personal Life