Background: Access to medicines and technologies is a key building block of the WHO health systems framework. In 2018, the World Health Organization (WHO) published the first Essential Diagnostics List (EDL) to address the need for countries to make essential diagnostics more accessible and affordable to patients in low-and-middle-income countries and to complement the more established Essential Medicines List (EML). The effective implementation of the WHO EDL is vital to ensure its impact on improving health outcomes. This scoping review aims to map literature on the implementation, uptake and evaluation of the WHO essential lists in African nations in order to guide the effective implementation and evaluation of the WHO EDL. Methods: This review will map literature on the implementation and evaluation of the WHO’s essential diagnostic list (EDL) and essential medical list (EML), using the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines for scoping review. The implementation considerations we will review include, study designs used in the evaluation of the WHO essential lists, and the outcome measures, findings, gaps and limitations highlighted in the included articles. We will review both primary and secondary quantitative and qualitative literature evaluating the WHO essential lists. A comprehensive search strategy, developed with an information scientist, will be used to identify relevant sources. The database to be searched include: MEDLINE (Pubmed), CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, the Health Technology Assessment database, EMBASE, Health systems evidence, African Index Medicus, Web of Science, Science Direct, Scopus and WHO library databases. Grey Literature will be accessed by searching for policy documents, diagnostic guidelines, and reports of ministry of health, health agencies through their websites and links published in the last three years from selected African countries. Searches, study selection and data extraction will be conducted using the covidence platform by two independent reviewers. The Mixed Method Appraisal Tool (MMAT) version 2018 will be used to assess the quality of included studies. The findings will be analysed using the thematic content analysis approach and the results presented narratively and graphically.Discussion: We anticipate finding relevant literature on the implementation considerations for WHO’s essential diagnostic and medicines list in Africa. This review is likely to reveal implementation considerations, challenges, gaps, which could guide future evaluation, implementation, policy development, and development of practice tools to support the wider adoption of the WHO essential diagnostic list in Africa. Dissemination: We plan to publish our findings in a peer-reviewed journal and develop useful and accessible summary of the results.