From 35 Million Users to Shutdown: MTN Is Scrapping Ayoba
MTN's Africa-born super app is closing after seven years. The telecom giant is moving on to something bigger.
What's Happening?
MTN Group has started closing down Ayoba, the all-in-one messaging and entertainment app it once hoped would become Africa's version of WeChat.
The decision came in March 2026 and is part of a bigger shift in how MTN plans to deliver digital services going forward.
Instead of running several separate apps, the company wants to bring everything: messaging, content, payments, and connectivity into one single platform.
MTN says the goal is to reduce fragmentation and give customers a more consistent experience across all its services.
What Happened to Ayoba?
MTN removed Ayoba from app stores on March 20, 2026, and gave existing users a 30-day grace period starting February 20 to reinstall the app one last time before it disappeared permanently. Users in countries like Nigeria, Ghana, and South Africa received notifications about the shutdown through in-app messages.
Anyone who uninstalls the app after March 20 won't be able to get it back.
A Brief History of Ayoba
MTN launched Ayoba in 2019 with big ambitions. The name comes from South African slang meaning something "cool" or "great."
The idea was to build a homegrown African super app that could handle chat, video calls, music, games, news, and mobile money; all in one place.
It supported over 22 languages and was active in countries including Nigeria, Cameroon, South Africa, Ghana, Uganda, and Benin.
The early numbers looked good. Within four months of launch, it had 1 million users, and by the end of 2022, that had grown to 20 million active users.The platform peaked at 35 million users by the end of 2023. MTN had set a target of 100 million users; a goal it never reached.
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A big reason for early growth was free data. MTN customers could use the app without spending their own data bundles, which made it attractive especially in markets where data costs are high.
Why Did It Fail to Take Off?
Despite the impressive user numbers, the foundation wasn't solid. Ayoba's reliance on free data incentives attracted users but failed to build lasting value.
Once those incentives declined, many users left, exposing a weak product-market fit.
It also struggled to compete with dominant platforms like WhatsApp and Telegram, which already had strong network effects and deep user loyalty across the continent.
Technical problems made things worse, with users in several markets reporting ongoing verification difficulties that made it hard to re-register by 2025.
Where Is MTN Focusing Now?
MTN's broader strategy, called Ambition 2030, is now centered on three things: connectivity, fintech, and digital infrastructure. The company's fintech business grew 24.9% and processed $500 billion in transaction value, showing clearly where MTN sees its future.
By comparison, the Digital Services segment that included Ayoba grew 15% solid, but not the priority.
While MTN has not confirmed exactly which Ayoba features will carry over to the new unified platform, the move signals a clear shift from building standalone apps to creating one integrated ecosystem.
What Does This Mean for Users?
If you're currently using Ayoba in an affected market, the clock is ticking. Users have a 30-day window from March 20, 2026, to download the app one last time. After that period ends, it will no longer be available for download.
For the millions who used Ayoba for free chats, music, and games, the shutdown closes a chapter on what was one of Africa's most ambitious attempts to build a home-grown digital platform.
MTN has not yet shared a launch date for its new unified platform.
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