Nigeria’s push for a fully digital economy received a significant boost in the first quarter of 2026, as broadband penetration metrics showed a resilient upward trajectory.
According to the latest market data from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), broadband penetration reached a new peak by March 2026, reflecting a year-on-year increase compared to the same period in 2025.
Nigeria’s broadband penetration continued its upward trajectory in the first quarter of 2026, reflecting steady improvements in digital infrastructure, mobile connectivity, and data consumption patterns.
As of March 2026, broadband penetration reached 54.30%, up from 51.97% recorded in December 2025, which is a 2.32% in the first quarter 2026, signaling gradual but consistent growth beyond the 50% threshold.
In absolute terms, broadband subscriptions climbed to approximately 117,710,397, driven largely by mobile broadband adoption across GSM networks.
Key Drivers of Growth
The expansion of broadband penetration in Q1 2026 can be attributed to several factors, such as the mobile-first internet access nature of the country.
Over 99% of broadband connections in Nigeria are mobile-based, making smartphones the primary gateway to connectivity.
4G remains the leading technology, while 5G adoption is gradually increasing, while rapid urbanisation, especially in cities like Lagos, continues to push demand for high-speed connectivity.
Despite the progress, industry watchers believe there are lots of rooms for growth like reducing the persistent challenges of infrastructure deficits in rural areas, high cost of right-of-way charges, power supply constraints, and limited fibre backbone penetration.
Government interventions
Last month, Dr. Aminu Maida, the executive vice chairman NCC announced major initiatives to address quality of service (QoS) challenges by increasing the number of base stations in Nigeria.
Key Highlights on Base Station Expansion (2026):
He said the Commission is targeting the upgrade of 12,000 base stations in 2026 to improve network capacity, enhance data speeds, and transition legacy 2G/3G sites to 4G and 5G.
As of late April 2026, approximately 2,800 upgrades have already been completed, following a low-performing 2025 where only around 300 upgrades were recorded.
The NCC’s initiative aims to alleviate congestion caused by rapidly rising data consumption, which has made existing infrastructure inadequate.
CNI:
On the issue of Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) protection, Maida said that NCC is collaborating with the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) to secure existing sites, addressing issues such as generator theft and securing Right of Way (RoW) for new installations.
On the issue of poor quality of service, the EVC stated that operators who fail to meet service benchmarks will face penalties, which will be used to compensate subscribers.
Outlook
Broadband penetration is expected to continue rising in 2026, but at a moderate pace, unless structural bottlenecks are addressed. Policy reforms, infrastructure investments, and spectrum efficiency will determine whether Nigeria can accelerate toward universal broadband access.
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