Nigeria has launched an ambitious digital platform aimed at transforming economic opportunities for 25 million women nationwide. The Happy Woman App, unveiled by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu last week, represents one of the most comprehensive attempts to use technology for gender-inclusive development in Africa.
Beyond Good Intentions: A Serious Infrastructure Play
The platform isn’t just another government app destined for obscurity. Launched at the State House in Abuja with Vice President Kashim Shettima presiding, the Happy Woman App serves as a secure digital hub connecting women to financing, skills development programs, market opportunities, essential services, and government support, all through a single interface.
The initiative scales up the Nigeria for Women Programme, originally approved in 2018 through a $100 million credit from the International Development Association. After a successful pilot phase that reached over one million women across six states, the federal government is now expanding nationwide with co-financing from the World Bank, participating state governments, and technical support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Hajiya Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, set an aggressive target: 10 million verified women registrations within ten months. The platform aggregates access to programs, finance opportunities, skills training, protection services, and market linkages that have historically been scattered across multiple agencies and initiatives.
What Women Actually Get
For Nigeria’s female entrepreneurs and micro-business owners, the app promises tangible resources. Women can access loans and grants through partner financial institutions, participate in skills training programs, connect with mentorship networks, and reach markets that were previously inaccessible.
The platform includes several flagship initiatives. The Empower Her Financial Literacy Training program teaches money management strategies as a mandatory entry point for those seeking financing. The One Million Women Economic Empowerment Program provides low-interest loans and equipment financing. The Happy Woman Founders Challenge will identify and fund 1,000 women-led innovative businesses, while the Creator Program will target 10,000 female digital content creators with mentorship and monetisation opportunities.
Health and wellness support rounds out the offering, with partnerships providing affordable healthcare and wellness packages, addressing the reality that economic empowerment requires physical wellbeing.
The Execution Challenge
Ambition means little without implementation. Nigeria’s track record with digital government initiatives is mixed, and reaching 25 million women in a country with uneven internet penetration poses real obstacles. The platform’s success depends on consistent funding, state-level coordination, and overcoming the digital divide that affects rural women most severely.
The government appears aware of these challenges. President Tinubu called on the World Bank to strengthen its financing and technical support, acknowledging that “digital inclusion is no longer optional; it is foundational to effective service delivery and national competitiveness.” He also praised state governors for aligning federal vision with state-level execution, a necessary coordination in Nigeria’s federal structure.
Whether the Happy Woman App becomes transformative infrastructure or another underutilized platform will depend on sustained political will, adequate funding, and the unglamorous work of registration drives, training sessions, and local partnerships. For now, 10 million Nigerian women have a new pathway opening before them. The question is whether the path will be maintained.











