The accreditation, issued by the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise Development Agency (MSMEDA), marks the operational debut of the Egyptian Startup Charter. This unified national framework was designed to categorize high-growth, tech-enabled firms differently from traditional small businesses, unlocking a specific suite of tax and regulatory perks.
For the Cairo-based fintech, the label is more than a badge of honor; it is a gateway to aggressive tax breaks and streamlined operations in a market where “SME” has historically been a broad and often burdensome classification.
Bridging the $50bn SME Gap
Founded in 2022 by Ahmed Zaki, Nehal Helmy, and Saif Edeen El Bendari, Flend operates as a digital non-banking financial institution (NBFI). It utilizes AI-driven credit scoring to provide short-term working capital to SMEs that are often overlooked by traditional banks.
The startup’s model relies on embedded finance. By integrating with over 20 supply chain platforms across healthcare, retail, and agri-food, Flend captures data at the point of transaction to assess risk.
“Receiving the startup classification as the first accredited company is a testament to the confidence in our technology-based business model,” says Nihal Helmy, co-founder of Flend.
The company is currently chasing a significant prize: Egypt’s estimated $50bn SME financing gap. Following a $3m seed round in 2025 — backed by Egypt Ventures, Plus VC, and Banque Misr — Flend aims to deploy EGP 1bn ($20.8m) in loans over the next 12 months.
What the “Startup Label” actually changes
For years, Egyptian founders complained that they were taxed and audited like corner shops or heavy manufacturers. The Startup Charter, and the resulting label Flend now holds, changes the math for venture-backed companies.
Under legislation enacted in early 2025, labeled startups with annual revenues below EGP 20m ($415,000) benefit from a shift in how they are handled by the taxman:
| Incentive | Standard Corporate Rule | Startup Label Rule |
| Tax Basis | 22.5% on Net Profit | 0.4–1.5% Flat Turnover Tax |
| Audit Risk | Annual potential audits | 5-year audit immunity |
| Capital Gains | Standard corporate rates | 0% on asset sales & dividends |
| Liquidation | Often 2+ years | 90-day “fast-track” process |
| Customs | Variable high rates | 2% flat rate on tech equipment |
“Flend is solving a major regional challenge — making SME finance digital-first and embedded,” says Hasan Haider, Founder and Managing Partner at Plus VC. By securing this license, Flend also lowers its own operational friction, allowing more capital to be diverted toward scaling its lending book rather than administrative compliance.
The Bottom Line
The issuance of the first license is a signal to the broader MENA investment community that Egypt is formalizing its “startup-friendly” rhetoric into policy. For MSMEDA, the challenge now lies in the speed of processing. Hundreds of startups are expected to apply for the label via the Startup Egypt platform in the coming months.
To maintain the label, companies like Flend must prove they meet specific criteria regarding innovation, scalability, and investment readiness. If they exceed the revenue threshold or fail to maintain tech-centric operations, they risk being transitioned back to the standard SME tax bracket.
For now, Flend has a first-mover advantage. With the license in hand and a fresh injection of debt and equity, the startup is positioned to lead the charge in a newly regulated, and significantly more lucrative, digital lending landscape.

