Cascador now accepts applications for its 2026 ScaleUp Program, a 12-week growth program built for founders who have already proved that their businesses can sell, hire, and survive. The new cohort will include 12 founders. Cascador will cover travel, lodging, and meals for the in-person sessions in Lagos, give each founder a $5,000 stipend, and award $50,000 in Pitch Day prizes. Applications close on June 15 at 5 pm WAT.
Cascador is going after founders who already have traction
This is not another early-stage startup class for people with an idea and a slide deck. Cascador says it wants founders with proven traction, stronger operations, and businesses that can absorb growth capital with care. Its application page says founders must run a business that has operated for at least two years and must meet its listed revenue screen, which it states as $70,000 or more and also as ₦100 million or more in annual revenue.
Many Nigerian founders do not struggle because they lack ambition. They struggle because they sit in a difficult middle. They have moved past the first stage, but they still need stronger systems, better financial discipline, and the right kind of capital to keep growing without losing control of the business.
The program gives founders more than training
Cascador has built the 2026 program as a mix of remote preparation, in-person sessions in Lagos, site visits, weekly virtual education, and a final intensive that ends with Pitch Day in November. The structure starts with remote prep on August 17 and runs through November 6. Each company can also involve up to three executive team members in the virtual part of the program, which gives founders a better shot at turning lessons into action inside the business.
The strongest part of the offer sits beyond the classroom. Cascador says founders who complete the program can apply for its Catalytic Fund, which now targets between $2 million and $5 million a year in debt or equity capital. That matters for founders in sectors like logistics, healthcare, manufacturing, education, agriculture, and financial services, where growth often needs patient capital and flexible repayment more than flashy venture rounds.
Sterling Bank gives the fund a practical edge
Cascador’s partnership with Sterling Bank gives the 2026 program added weight. The two groups launched a funding model in 2025 that combines low-interest debt, tailored repayment plans, reduced collateral pressure, and advisory support. Cascador says the model aims to match financing to the real cash flow of growing businesses instead of forcing founders into rigid loan terms that can choke growth.
That approach speaks directly to a long-running gap in Nigeria’s startup market. Program director Amanda Etuk told Techpoint that many businesses outgrow traditional accelerators but still look too early for institutional capital. She also said some companies do not need to give up large chunks of ownership when revenue-based growth or local currency debt can do the job better. That is a practical message in a market where founders now think harder about dilution, repayment, and survival.
Cascador already has a track record
Cascador started in 2019 and focuses on founders who already run real businesses, not experiments. Its official impact pages highlight alumni in fintech, mobility, agriculture, education, healthcare, and essential services, including Sycamore, Lenco, Utiva, Soilless Farm Lab, Treepz, and Drive45. The program says those companies have used Cascador to sharpen strategy, improve leadership, and get ready for growth capital.
Recent reports on the 2026 launch say Cascador has supported about 70 ventures since 2019 and that those alumni have raised about $125 million in capital. The same reports say alumni created more than 67,000 jobs in 2025 and served over 1.7 million customers. Those numbers give the new cohort a stronger story than many accelerator announcements do, because they point to actual operating businesses with measurable outcomes.
Nigerian founders should pay attention to the details
The 2026 cohort is small by design, so Cascador is clearly choosing depth over volume. Founders start with a short preliminary application. Semi-finalists then move to a full application with financial documents, finalists interview in July, and Cascador will notify the final cohort by August 1. The group also says early applicants get faster status updates and a chance to attend Pitch Day on June 3.
For Nigerian growth-stage founders, the bigger signal sits in what Cascador values. It wants revenue, coachability, leadership growth, and businesses that can use capital well. In today’s market, that is not a side note. It is the whole point.












