Nigeria’s digital economy has reached a historic milestone, with total data consumption hitting 4.16 million terabytes (TB) in the first quarter of 2026, according to the Nigerian Communications Commission. The figure represents a 27% quarter-on-quarter increase, marking the highest data usage ever recorded over a three-month period in the country.
This surge underscores a deeper structural transformation in how Nigerians work, transact, and consume content in Africa’s largest economy.
To put the scale into perspective, 4 million terabytes roughly equates to millions of hours of continuous 4K video streaming. But beyond entertainment, the data boom reflects a broader shift toward always-on digital engagement across business, education, and finance.
Affordable smartphones and declining data costs have widened access beyond major urban centres, accelerating mobile data usage in Nigeria. At the same time, high-definition streaming demand from global platforms like Netflix to regional providers such as StarTimes has pushed consumption higher.
Fintech is another major driver. Platforms including Paystack, Moniepoint, and OPay rely on persistent connectivity to power agent banking and POS transactions, significantly boosting daily data traffic.
As one Lagos based analyst noted, data usage is no longer occasional, it now underpins payroll processing, school fee payments, and inventory systems for millions of small businesses.
The NCC attributes the surge to ongoing investments in network infrastructure, particularly the expansion of 4G coverage and fibre-optic rollout by operators such as MTN Nigeria and Airtel Africa.
However, rapid growth is exposing capacity constraints. Average download speeds in many urban areas remain below global benchmarks, while rural connectivity gaps persist, highlighting the uneven distribution of broadband access.
The record consumption is increasingly testing network resilience. Regulators warn that without faster investment in backhaul infrastructure and spectrum allocation, service quality could deteriorate.
In response, the NCC is preparing to release additional 5G spectrum licenses before the end of the year, aiming to ease congestion and support future demand.
For investors, the data surge reinforces Nigeria’s position as a high-growth telecom market. Data revenue growth has been strong, with operators benefiting from rising demand for digital services and mobile money.
Yet profitability remains under pressure. Telecom companies face rising diesel costs, driven by unreliable power supply, alongside currency depreciation that increases the cost of imported network equipment. These factors could prompt tariff adjustments later in 2026, though such moves remain politically sensitive.
The milestone comes as Nigeria pushes toward its National Broadband Plan 2025–2030, which targets 70% broadband penetration, up from about 48% currently. Achieving this goal will require sustained policy support and significant private sector investment.
For now, the record highlights both progress and pressure: Nigeria’s appetite for data is accelerating rapidly, but infrastructure must scale just as quickly to keep pace.




