If you had never heard of Ayoba, you were not alone. And that, more than anything else, is exactly why MTN just pulled the plug on it.
The telecom giant officially removed Ayoba from the Google Play Store and Apple App Store on March 20, 2026, ending a seven-year experiment to build Africa’s own super app. If you still have the app installed, you have a 30-day window to grab your data before it goes dark for good.
What Was Ayoba, Exactly?
MTN launched Ayoba in 2019 with big ambitions. The idea was to build something like WeChat, one app that could handle everything: messaging, music, gaming, mobile money, news, mini-apps. MTN even gave subscribers free daily data just to use it, which is a very MTN thing to do.
For a while, the numbers looked good. By April 2024, the app had crossed 35 million monthly active users across Africa, including Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, and several other markets. MTN was eyeing 100 million users by 2025. That target never came close.
The Real Problem Was WhatsApp
Once MTN stopped throwing free data at people, engagement dropped sharply. The uncomfortable truth is that Ayoba never had a strong reason to exist on its own merits. Users did not choose it; they only used it because it was free. The moment that the incentive weakened, most people went straight back to WhatsApp and Telegram, platforms they were already using to talk to their friends, families, and group chats.
Ayoba also had persistent technical problems. Throughout 2025, users in multiple markets complained about verification errors that made it difficult or impossible to re-register on the app. That kind of friction is fatal for a messaging platform that needs people to show up daily.
By the time MTN conducted its formal review, Ayoba had shrunk to just 1 million monthly active users, a fraction of where it once was.
So Where Is MTN Putting Its Energy?
MTN says it is building a unified digital platform that will roll connectivity, content, and services into one experience. The company is not abandoning the digital services space; it is just consolidating instead of spreading itself thin across too many standalone apps.
MTN’s fintech division grew 24.9% in 2025 and processed $500 billion in transaction value. That is where the money is moving. Competing with WhatsApp for chat dominance, meanwhile, does not appear to be worth the investment anymore.
What This Means for You
If you are in Nigeria and still have Ayoba on your phone, now is the time to save anything you want to keep: messages, contacts, whatever matters. Once the 30-day window closes, you will not be able to reinstall it.
Beyond that, this is a reminder of how hard it is to build a local alternative to global platforms that already have billions of users and deep network effects. Even with MTN’s size, distribution, and subscriber base behind it, Ayoba could not crack the habit. Africa got a homegrown super app dream, and WhatsApp just kept winning.











