Abstract Introduction Heart failure (HF) is a major health concern mainly diagnosed among elderly individuals. Primarily, researchers have focused on this age group, nevertheless, compared to individuals from other regions of the world, Africans presents with HF two decades sooner (52 versus 79 years). Even though it manifests early, young persons (18–35 years old) are also diagnosed with HF with prognoses comparable to the older group. Less is known about how much study is concentrated on this age range, although globally, young adults of African origin make up the majority of those with an early onset of heart failure. Additionally, obtaining information about how HF impacts African youth remains challenging. Purpose To determine the cause of Africans' early HF diagnosis as well as the risk factors for HF diagnosis and early mortality among young adults. Methodology Three electronic databases— MEDLINE Ovid, Scopus, and CINAHL Plus—were searched using the Boolean operators. The first retrieved hits were checked for relevancy by titles and abstracts. Then, publications were fully screened for inclusion in the review based on the pre-established criteria. Also, reference lists of the articles were snowballed for pertinent studies. The scientific integrity of the studies was evaluated using a guided, in-depth peer-reviewed article on how to critically analyse clinical research and the Critical Appraisal Skill Programme (CASP) tool cohort checklist. Pertinent information regarding the study was analysed using a narrative review methodology. Eleven (11) articles out of the 135 pulled from the databases met the requirements for inclusion in the review after a thorough screening. One article was eliminated upon critical evaluation of the research's methodology, and an eligible article was discovered from snowballing reference lists. Therefore, only 11 articles qualified for this review study. Results Findings from the review show that HF is diagnosed earlier among Africans due to the early presentation of the major causes of HF before the age of 30 years. Rheumatic heart disease, cardiomyopathy, ischemic heart disease, HTN, and pulmonary illnesses (COPD, TB, and pulmonary arterial hypertension) are known aetiologies. More so, young adults who are diabetic, obese, have hyperlipidaemia or smoke cigarettes are more likely to develop HF. Furthermore, socioeconomic status, alcohol use, smoking, renal dysfunction, higher serum levels of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and creatine kinase (Isomer MB), cardiogenic shock, and decreased ejection fraction were the predictors of death with significant p-values (0.05). Conclusion Although HF affects young African adults disproportionately causing them to live lower quality of life and shorter lives, no research before this has been conducted. Therefore, further study is required to understand how HF affects this target age range (18 to 35 years) and to develop a long-term plan to fight this illness before it worsens.