This learning paper explores women’s access to agricultural technology in three corridors in Tanzania; Arusha, Morogoro and Mtwara. The SSBVC project implemented an eVoucher activity which provides an electronic voucher to small entrepreneurs (SEs) in order to receive a price discount on agricultural equipment to improve productivity. The purpose of the eVoucher price discount is to stimulate market interaction between market actors incentivizing supply and demand. It strategically promotes sustainable change as the price discount is geared towards those most in need of the discount while demonstrating the benefit of agricultural equipment upgrading and allows for a demonstration effect to create demand from other SEs to adopt this equipment. When measuring SEs reached through the eVoucher activity the project focused on who purchased the agricultural equipment to analyze who was benefitting from this activity. However, this study aims to dive deeper into “rights to an asset” which includes purchasing but also usage, ownership and control.