MTN’s subscription loss drags Nigeria’s active line down by 1%

Mobile subscriptions in Nigeria declined by 1 per cent to 223.3 million in April, primarily due to a significant subscription loss recorded by MTN, latest industry statistics released by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) have revealed.

As of March, active subscriptions across the networks of MTN, Glo, Airtel, and 9mobile stood at 225.8 million, revealing that the operators lost about 2.5 million subscriptions in April.

The reduction in the telco’s active subscriptions is attributable to the abandonment of SIMs that have not been linked with the National Identification Number (NIN) as mandated by the government.

The April figure also came as the second consecutive month of loss for the mobile operators, having recorded a 0.4 per cent decline in subscriptions for March.

With the decline in actively connected lines recorded by the operators, the country’s teledensity, which measures the number of active telephone connections per 100 inhabitants living within an area, also slumped to 117.17 per cent in April from 118.48 per cent in March.

The NCC’s statistics show that MTN, which is the largest operator by subscriber number, pulled down the total industry database with a 2.8 million decline in its subscriptions.

This brought its total active subscriptions to 88.6 million from the 91.6 million it recorded in March 2023.

However, Glo recorded a 128,017 increase in subscriptions in the month. With this, the operator was able to maintain its position as the second-largest operator by subscriber number in April 2023. The new activations on the network brought Glo’s total subscriptions to 60.9 million from 60.7 million recorded in March this year.

Airtel also recorded a marginal increase of 3,285 in its subscriptions database for the month, which brought its total subscriptions to 60.33 million from 60.32 million in March.

9mobile recorded the highest gain in April as its database grew by 262,737. This brought its total active subscriptions from 13.1 million in March to 13.4 million in April.