Billionaires Of Kampala: Uganda’s Top 14 Tycoons Revealed In 2026 Rankings
SWIFT DAILY NEWS

By Frank Kamuntu
Uganda’s economic transformation over the past three decades has produced a new and influential class of private wealth holders, reshaping the country’s commercial landscape while reigniting debate about inequality and inclusive growth.
The newly released Uganda Wealth Power Index 2026, an independent asset-based analysis of private capital concentration, estimates that the country’s 14 wealthiest individuals collectively control approximately US$10.3 billion nearly 15.9% of Uganda’s 2025 gross domestic product.
The findings highlight both the dynamism of Uganda’s entrepreneurial economy and the widening gap between rapid capital accumulation at the top and modest household incomes across much of the population.
Once constrained by political instability and economic stagnation, Uganda has steadily rebuilt since the 1990s through market reforms, private investment, and expanding regional trade. By 2025, the country’s nominal GDP approached US$65 billion, supported by population growth, urban expansion and a steadily diversifying private sector.
Yet macroeconomic progress has not translated evenly into household prosperity. GDP per capita remains near US$1,070 annually, and a significant share of Ugandans still live on less than US$3 per day, according to international development data.
Against this backdrop, the rise of a concentrated wealth class reflects a broader structural reality: in emerging economies with limited public capital markets, wealth creation is often driven by ownership of physical assets and privately held enterprises.
The 2026 Wealth Power Index evaluates fortunes not only by estimated net worth but also by sectoral influence, industrial footprint and economic impact.
Topping the ranking is Dr. Hamis Kiggundu, whose estimated net worth of US$1.3 billion positions him as a leading figure among Uganda’s newer generation of entrepreneurs.
Kiggundu built his fortune through aggressive expansion in commercial real estate, beginning with landmark developments such as Ham Towers and Ham Shopping Mall. His strategy emphasizes operational assets — including urban property, agro-processing facilities, beverage manufacturing and digital payments platforms — rather than traditional financial investments.
His rise reflects a broader shift toward locally financed infrastructure and industrial ventures anchored in the real economy.
Close behind is veteran businessman Sudhir Ruparelia, with an estimated fortune of US$1.2 billion. Through the Ruparelia Group, his interests span hospitality, education, insurance and large-scale real estate developments, representing one of Uganda’s most diversified conglomerate models.
Other major figures in the index include:
- John Bosco Muwonge (US$850M+) — a low-profile but influential commercial property investor in Kampala’s central business district.
- Drake Lubega (US$800M+) — combining real estate with hospitality and manufacturing ventures.
- Mansour Matovu (“Yanga”) (US$785M) — a self-made entrepreneur whose wealth grew from grassroots commerce into major urban property holdings.
- Karim Hirji (US$785M) — chairman of the Dembe Group, with investments spanning hospitality, automotive and finance.
Among the notable investors expanding Uganda’s property-driven wealth ecosystem are Christine Nabukeera, Tom Kitandwe, and Guster Lule Ntake, whose portfolios blend land assets with telecommunications, agribusiness and hospitality.
Industrial & Corporate Influence
Several index members represent Uganda’s industrial backbone:
- Godfrey Kirumira (US$615M+) operates across petroleum distribution, manufacturing and hospitality.
- Charles Mbire (US$600M+) maintains interests in telecommunications, energy and pharmaceuticals, symbolizing modern corporate diversification.
- Amos Nzeyi (US$550M+) built major beverage and consumer goods enterprises, including Crown Beverages and Hot Loaf Bakery, helping expand Uganda’s manufacturing base.
Meanwhile, Ahmed Omar Mandela (US$535M+) has grown the Mandela Group into a multi-sector enterprise spanning petroleum retail, agro-processing and the regional Café Javas restaurant chain.
Rounding out the list is Patrick Bitature (US$220M+), founder of the Simba Group, whose investments in telecommunications distribution, hospitality and energy infrastructure reflect an earlier generation of liberalization-era entrepreneurs.
A clear pattern emerges across the index: real estate remains Uganda’s primary wealth engine.
Rapid urbanization — particularly in Kampala has driven sustained demand for commercial buildings, rental housing and mixed-use developments. Property ownership provides predictable rental income and long-term asset appreciation in an economy where stock markets and institutional investment channels remain relatively shallow.
Hospitality, petroleum distribution, agribusiness and manufacturing have emerged as secondary pillars, often complementing property investments.
The Poverty Paradox
The growth of billionaire-level fortunes contrasts sharply with everyday economic realities for many Ugandans.
Large portions of the population remain dependent on subsistence agriculture and informal employment, raising ongoing questions about wealth distribution, access to capital and whether private-sector expansion can translate into broad-based prosperity.
Economists note that concentrated wealth is not unusual in early-stage developing economies, but its long-term impact depends on whether capital is reinvested into productive sectors that generate employment and industrial growth.
Uganda’s economic outlook remains cautiously optimistic. Oil development, infrastructure investment and rapid adoption of digital finance are expected to drive continued expansion over the next decade.
The Wealth Power Index suggests that private capital formation is currently advancing faster than income convergence — making the country’s emerging economic elite increasingly central to national development outcomes.
Rather than a celebration of personal fortunes, the index offers a lens into how economic power is structured in modern Uganda — and how the decisions of a small group of capital holders may influence urban transformation, fiscal capacity and inclusive growth in the years ahead.
