Uganda's agritech scene has grown fast, and the events around it have become essential meeting points for the people building the future of farming and food systems. Whether you run an agritech startup, supply inputs, finance farmers, or work in agribusiness, knowing which events matter — and what actually happens at them — helps you make the most of your time and connections.
What agritech events in Uganda are about
Agritech events bring together the players across the agricultural value chain: technology startups, input suppliers, agro-dealers, financiers, development partners, cooperatives and the farmers themselves. They range from large conferences and exhibitions to focused networking evenings, demo days, field days and investor meetups. The common thread is connecting innovation with the people who can use it — linking a new digital tool, financing model or supply-chain solution to the businesses and farmers who need it.
What people actually do at these events
- Network and partner — the main draw. Startups meet investors, suppliers meet distributors, NGOs meet implementing partners.
- See demos — new platforms, farm equipment, mobile tools and agri-finance products shown live.
- Learn — panels and talks on market access, climate-smart farming, export compliance (like EUDR), and digital finance.
- Do deals — sourcing agreements, pilot partnerships, and funding conversations often start here.
- Showcase — exhibitors display products to a targeted audience of buyers and partners.
Who attends
Founders of agritech and agribusiness ventures, agro-input companies, commercial farmers and cooperatives, banks and microfinance institutions with agri-portfolios, donor and development programmes, and government agricultural bodies. For anyone working in Ugandan agriculture, these rooms are where relationships that move the sector forward are built.
How to get value from an agritech event
Come with a clear goal — whether it's finding a distribution partner, raising capital, or sourcing produce. Prepare a short, sharp description of what you do and what you're looking for. Follow up within 48 hours while connections are fresh. And treat the informal conversations as seriously as the formal sessions — in Uganda's agribusiness world, trust built over a drink often matters more than a pitch from a stage.
🎉 Join the Basket Advisory Launch — 1 September 2026
An evening networking reception at Kololo Courts Hotel rooftop, Kampala (6–8 PM), bringing together leaders across these sectors. RSVP to attend.
See the launch & RSVP →Kennedy Nyabwala is the founder of Basket Advisory Technologies, with extensive cross-sector experience spanning e-commerce, agribusiness, supply chain, logistics, and fintech across Uganda and East Africa. Based in Kampala, Uganda.