InfiniLink, an Egyptian semiconductor startup specializing in next-generation chip design and connectivity solutions, has secured $10 million in a seed funding round to accelerate product development and expand into international markets.
The round was led by Silicon Badia, with additional participation from Global Ventures, Sawari Ventures, and several prominent angel investors with deep tech and semiconductor backgrounds. This funding represents one of the largest seed rounds for a deep-tech startup in the MENA region to date.
Founded in 2023 by industry veterans Amr El-Geziry and Salma Nour, InfiniLink is focused on delivering high-performance, energy-efficient semiconductor solutions that address critical demands in sectors such as telecommunications, data centers, and IoT devices.
“Our mission at InfiniLink is to bridge the technology gap and position Egypt as a leader in advanced semiconductor innovation,” said El-Geziry, CEO of InfiniLink. “This funding will allow us to expand our engineering team, launch our first products, and form strategic partnerships with global tech leaders.”
The company is currently developing a range of ultra-low-latency connectivity chips aimed at improving data transmission speeds and reducing energy consumption across large-scale network infrastructures.
Investors pointed to InfiniLink’s strong technical capabilities and the growing global demand for semiconductor innovation as key reasons for their investment.
“InfiniLink has built a world-class team addressing one of the most critical challenges in modern computing: achieving faster, greener connectivity,” said Nameer Khan, General Partner at Silicon Badia. “We are proud to support a company with global potential that also represents a new frontier for deep-tech entrepreneurship in the Middle East.”
With this fresh capital, InfiniLink intends to scale its R&D efforts, establish operations in Europe and the United States, and initiate pilot programs with major telecom and cloud service providers by early 2026.
The funding round also reflects a rising interest in hardware innovation among investors in emerging markets, as countries like Egypt position themselves as new hubs for advanced technology development.