Nigeria’s creative sector has entered a new chapter with the launch of Phase 2 of the Creative Economy Development Fund (CEDF) — a government-backed programme designed to supercharge innovation, unlock financing, and scale businesses across the arts and cultural industries.
Unlike its pilot phase, which drew thousands of early-stage applications, this new rollout is bolder in ambition and wider in scope. Entrepreneurs, startups, and established ventures in fields ranging from film and gaming to fashion, publishing, culinary arts, and cultural tourism can now tap into loans of up to $100,000 to drive expansion.
The redesigned application portal (www.cedf.gov.ng) reflects the fund’s upgraded vision. A more intuitive dashboard now enables creators to pitch ideas, track submissions, and access resource materials in real time. Transparency and digital monitoring tools have also been embedded to ensure accountability and measurable impact.
Officials say the fund is more than just capital—it is an economic catalyst aimed at building resilient SMEs, scaling export-ready brands, and positioning Nigeria as a global hub for creative talent. With support structures for training, markets, and technology integration, the CEDF is being positioned as a cornerstone of the country’s long-term creative renaissance.
By broadening its reach, the Ministry of Art, Culture, Tourism, and the Creative Economy hopes not just to finance dreams, but to institutionalize growth across Nigeria’s diverse creative landscape.