MultiChoice Nigeria has seen a steep drop in its subscriber base, losing over 1.4 million customers in the past two years, as consumers increasingly push back against repeated price hikes on its flagship television services, DStv and GOtv.
The decline underscores growing tension between cost-sensitive Nigerian households and the pay-TV provider’s inflation-driven pricing model.
The most recent round of price increases took effect on March 1, 2025, with the DStv Compact bouquet jumping from ₦15,700 to ₦19,000, a 21% increase. GOtv packages saw similar upward revisions, igniting fresh backlash from subscribers and consumer rights groups.
Economic Strain and Consumer Exodus
MultiChoice attributes the losses to Nigeria’s challenging macroeconomic environment, marked by over 30% inflation, sustained currency depreciation, rising energy costs, and shrinking disposable income.
In the first half of FY2024, the company recorded a 243,000 drop in active Nigerian subscribers. That loss contributed to a broader 13% subscriber decline across the company’s “Rest of Africa” operations, where Nigeria is the largest market.
Over a two-year stretch, the cumulative subscriber loss in Nigeria has reached approximately 1.4 million, based on company filings and regional market analysis.
Revenue Dip and Foreign Exchange Losses
Despite the price hikes, MultiChoice’s Nigerian operations reported a 30% year-on-year decline in revenue, from $493.6 million to $341.7 million. The group also suffered foreign exchange losses totaling $249 million due to the naira’s depreciation, which continues to erode repatriated earnings.
These financial headwinds contributed to MultiChoice Group posting a 705.8 million rand pre-tax loss in FY2024, reversing its prior profit position.
The South African media conglomerate cited weak consumer sentiment, adverse currency swings, and increased competition across its African markets as major concerns.
Legal and Regulatory Backlash
The company is also grappling with mounting regulatory pressure. In June 2024, Nigeria’s Competition and Consumer Protection Tribunal fined MultiChoice Nigeria ₦150 million and ordered it to offer one month of free service to all subscribers for failing to provide adequate notice before implementing an earlier price increase.
Further legal complications emerged in March 2025, when the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) sued MultiChoice and its CEO, John Ugbe, for allegedly defying regulatory orders to halt planned tariff increases pending review.
Shift Toward Digital Alternatives
As pay-TV prices rise, Nigerian consumers are increasingly migrating to streaming platforms such as Netflix, YouTube, and local IPTV services, which offer more flexible pricing and on-demand options.
Social media is awash with subscriber complaints, many citing the need to reduce household expenses in the face of high electricity bills and rising data costs.
Looking Ahead
Analysts say MultiChoice’s challenges in Nigeria are symptomatic of a wider dilemma confronting legacy pay-TV operators across emerging markets: balancing operational costs with consumer affordability.
The company’s continued reliance on price adjustments, without significant service innovation or localization strategies, may further accelerate subscriber churn.
To remain competitive, experts advise that MultiChoice explore hybrid pricing models, digital bundling, and more responsive customer engagement to retain relevance in Africa’s most populous and digitally evolving market.