After eleven years as Africa’s homegrown streaming challenger, Showmax is shutting its doors. MultiChoice has confirmed that the platform will stop accepting new subscriptions from April 1, 2026, and will go completely dark by the end of that month. Its content, however, is moving to DStv Stream, MultiChoice’s satellite-linked streaming platform, where it will occupy a dedicated section inside the app.
The End of an Era, Not the Content
In an email sent to subscribers, MultiChoice described the transition as Showmax “starting a new chapter,” with favourite shows getting “a shiny new home on DStv Stream.” The framing is upbeat, but the underlying story is one of financial failure and strategic rationalisation.
In the three years leading up to Canal+’s acquisition of MultiChoice, Showmax accumulated losses of approximately €370 million. Even a high-profile relaunch in early 2024, backed by a $309 million investment from Comcast’s NBCUniversal and leveraging the technology powering Peacock, failed to reverse its fortunes. By 2025, trading losses had surged by 88% to $297 million, while revenue dropped to $48.5 million, far below the platform’s ambitious $1 billion annual revenue target.
The final decision to shut down came after Canal+ completed its acquisition of MultiChoice in September 2025, with the French company concluding that Showmax’s financial performance was unsatisfactory.
What Moves to DStv Stream
Showmax Originals moving to DStv Stream include standout titles such as The Wife, Youngins, Devilsdorp, Adulting, and popular continental series like Wura and Single Kiasi, alongside international titles and Afrikaans content.
These titles will be available to DStv Compact and DStv Premium subscribers, including satellite customers who already get DStv Stream as part of their package, as well as standalone DStv Stream customers.
MultiChoice has been deliberate in framing this as a content preservation move, not a burial. “Showmax helped unlock a wave of world-class African storytelling,” said Nomsa Philiso, Director of Content at MultiChoice. “That commitment to African storytelling does not change.”
A Bigger Consolidation in Motion
The Showmax-to-DStv-Stream migration appears to be just the first visible step in a wider restructuring. MultiChoice plans to consolidate technology stacks, cut duplication, and redirect investment into a single platform, and has also announced staff cuts through a voluntary severance package as part of a $115 million turnaround investment.
Reports suggest Canal+ is exploring a single “super app” that could fold MultiChoice and Canal+’s currently fragmented digital products into a unified streaming ecosystem, though this remains unconfirmed.
For now, the transition raises a question that Africa’s digital entertainment space cannot sidestep: as global streaming economics force consolidation, can a unified platform like DStv Stream retain the affordability and local focus that made Showmax worth building in the first place? The content found a new home. Whether the audience follows is the harder question.










