The complex interaction of socio-economic, cultural, and institutional elements influences girls' entrepreneurship, which has emerged as a vital contributor to economic growth and social change. This research delves into the important aspects that motivate girls to become entrepreneurs. It covers topics such as closing the gender gap, challenging conventional prejudices, finding role models that inspire, and the impact of both push and pull forces. Simultaneously, it draws attention to significant obstacles like societal expectations, work-life balance problems, constrained business networks, limited access to capital, and absence of mentoring. Environmentally friendly technology, information technology-enabled services, food processing, and biotechnology are some of the developing prospects that women entrepreneurs may find out about in this study. The study's overarching goal is to provide light on the ecosystem of girls' entrepreneurship by examining these factors; it then proposes that enabling legislation, financial inclusion, and social transformation are necessary to encourage women to start and build their businesses.