BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY MEDIA FOR AFRICA

More woes for MultiChoice as Ghana orders 30% price cut

Samuel Mungadze
By Samuel Mungadze, Africa editor
Johannesburg, 07 Jul 2025
(L-R)DSTV team led by Dr. Keabetswe Modimoeng, group executive for regulatory and corporate affairs met minister of communication, digital technology, and innovation, Samuel Nartey George. (Pic: Ghana ICT ministry)
(L-R)DSTV team led by Dr. Keabetswe Modimoeng, group executive for regulatory and corporate affairs met minister of communication, digital technology, and innovation, Samuel Nartey George. (Pic: Ghana ICT ministry)

The government has ordered MultiChoice Ghana to reduce DSTV subscription costs by 30%, noting the significant appreciation of local currency and growing dissatisfaction with current rates.

This comes as MultiChoice, which operates across Africa, continues to lose revenue and subscribers.

Ghana's minister of communication, digital technology, and innovation, Samuel Nartey George, made the call last week during a meeting with a DSTV team led by Dr. Keabetswe Modimoeng, group executive for regulatory and corporate affairs.

According to a ministry statement, George said the government's responsibility is to respond to Ghanaians' concerns over high DSTV pricing and outdated content offers.

The Minister pointed out that despite a 30% increase in the cedi's value over the past five months; DSTV prices have not reflected the positive economic trend.

‎The statement went on to say the minister is therefore calling for a 30% price reduction to match the cedi’s appreciation and to pass on economic benefits to consumers.

According to the statement, while MultiChoice has implemented promotional packages, people prefer a direct price reduction over temporary discounts.

George said feedback from public engagements revealed that many users are dissatisfied with DSTV's content, describing it as outdated save for Premier League football. They also believe that the current cost is not justified.

‎”To address the concerns, he said MultiChoice Ghana has until July 21 to formally respond to the government’s request. The Minister expects a concrete proposal by this date, allowing time for further engagement before the end of July,” the statement said.

‎In response, Dr. Modimoeng acknowledged the government's concerns and expressed gratitude for the opportunity to dialogue.

The MultiChoice team reacted positively to the minister's request and committed to provide input by July 21st. They emphasised the need of balancing public interest and business sustainability.

This is the continent's latest pricing conundrum for the pan-African pay-TV business, following fee disputes with Nigerian and Malawian authorities.

In Ghana, the demand for price cuts comes as MultiChoice is under pressure, having lost revenue and subscribers in the financial year that ended March 31, 2025.

Last month, the company announced its financial year-end results.

In a statement to shareholders last month on the Stock Exchange News Service, the company said the past two financial years have been a period of significant financial disruption for economies, corporates and consumers across Sub-Saharan Africa due to challenging macro-economic factors.

Combined with the impact of structural industry changes in video entertainment, such as the rise of piracy, streaming services and social media, this has materially affected the overall performance of the MultiChoice Group, it noted.

Over this period, MultiChoice said the group lost 2.8 million active linear subscribers and had to absorb a R10.2 billion negative impact on its top line due to local currency depreciation against the US dollar.

For the year, the company reveals that linear subscribers were down 1.2 million, or 8% year-on-year, to 14.5 million active subscribers, with the loss evenly split between South African (600 000) and rest of Africa (600 000).

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