It’s 2026. Nearly four years have passed since Nigeria launched 5G services with much fanfare and ambitious promises. Yet cities like Calabar (a state capital with over half a million residents) still cannot access fifth-generation mobile connectivity from major providers like MTN. This is not just disappointing. It’s a damning indictment of Nigeria’s telecommunications sector and a failure that Africa’s largest economy can no longer justify.
The Unacceptable Status Quo
Let’s be clear about what we’re discussing: In 2026, a major Nigerian city that serves as a state capital, hosts federal institutions, universities, and a growing technology sector, remains trapped with 4G connectivity while the world races toward 6G planning. MTN Nigeria operates 5G in just 13 cities. Airtel covers only four states. Together, they reach just 12.7% of Nigeria’s population.
More shocking is the adoption rate: fewer than 3% of Nigerian mobile users have accessed 5G services nearly four years after launch. This is a spectacular failure of infrastructure deployment in a nation that claims to aspire toward digital economy leadership.
The irony is particularly bitter for these smaller cities. MTN conducted 5G spectrum tests in different cities back in 2019, positioning Nigeria as a West African pioneer. Seven years later, that pioneering spirit has evaporated, replaced by the same old story: Lagos and Abuja get everything while the rest of Nigeria waits indefinitely.
No More Excuses
Telecommunications companies and their defenders offer familiar justifications for this glacial rollout. Let’s address them directly:
“Infrastructure is expensive”: Yes, it is. MTN, Mafab, and Airtel paid $820.8 million for 5G licenses. But these are profitable corporations operating in Africa’s largest telecommunications market with over 171 million active subscribers. If the business model only works for Lagos and Abuja, the business model is broken. Nigerian telecom operators reported billions in revenue annually; they can afford to expand beyond their comfort zones.
“We’re prioritising capacity over coverage”: This is corporate-speak for “we’re maximising profits in rich areas rather than serving the nation.” MTN’s CEO admitted the company kept 5G coverage stable at 12.7% in 2025, focusing on enhancing existing networks rather than expanding. Translation: shareholders matter more than citizens in Calabar, Port Harcourt, Enugu, and dozens of other cities.
“Device availability is a challenge”: This excuse doesn’t hold water. If telcos aggressively deployed networks nationwide, device manufacturers would follow the market. You don’t build infrastructure only after everyone owns compatible devices—you build it to drive adoption. This is backwards thinking that guarantees permanent underdevelopment.
“It’s a phased rollout”: Four years is not a phase; it’s a policy failure. Countries with far smaller economies and populations have achieved broader 5G coverage in less time. South Africa, despite its own challenges, has reached 50% population coverage. Nigeria’s approach isn’t phased; it’s stalled.
The Real Cost of This Failure
While telecom executives count profits in Lagos, real people in these smaller cities pay the price:
Economic Stagnation: Small and medium enterprises cannot compete with Lagos-based businesses that leverage 5G for cloud computing, IoT applications, and real-time data analytics. Every month without 5G widens the economic gap between Nigeria’s first-tier and second-tier cities, entrenching regional inequality.
Educational Disadvantage: Students and researchers in institutions lack access to advanced e-learning platforms, virtual laboratories, and collaborative tools that require 5G speeds and low latency. They’re being prepared for a digital economy that they cannot fully participate in.
Healthcare Access Denied: Remote surgery, real-time diagnostics, and telemedicine applications that could save lives require 5G connectivity. Patients don’t have access to these potentially life-saving innovations because telecom companies find it more profitable to over-serve Lagos.
Tourism and Cultural Impact: Cities like Calabar brand themselves as a tourism destination, yet visitors arrive to find connectivity inferior to what they’d experience in far smaller cities in Kenya, Rwanda, or South Africa. This is embarrassing and economically damaging.
A Crisis of Vision and Governance
Nigeria’s 5G failure exposes deeper problems. Where is the regulatory pressure from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to ensure equitable coverage? Why aren’t license conditions requiring broader geographic deployment? Why do we accept a system where private profit dictates which Nigerian citizens deserve 21st-century connectivity?
Other African nations haven’t settled for this. Rwanda, with a fraction of Nigeria’s population and economy, has implemented comprehensive digital infrastructure plans that prioritise nationwide coverage. Kenya’s 5G rollout, while imperfect, has reached multiple cities far faster than Nigeria’s. Even South Africa, despite economic challenges, has achieved 50% population coverage, nearly four times Nigeria’s measly 12.7%.
Nigeria isn’t poor. It isn’t small. It isn’t lacking in technical expertise. What it lacks is the political will to demand better from telecommunications companies and the regulatory framework to ensure equitable access to critical infrastructure.
Conclusion: Nigeria Deserves Better
It is 2026. Nigeria’s economy is larger than that of many countries where 5G coverage is comprehensive. Nigerian youth are among the most tech-savvy on the continent. Nigerian entrepreneurs build world-class digital solutions. Yet Nigerians in smaller cities are being told to wait indefinitely for connectivity that should have been standard infrastructure years ago.
This is unacceptable. The continued absence of 5G in major Nigerian cities isn’t a technical challenge or an economic inevitability; it’s a choice. It’s a choice by telecom operators to prioritise shareholder returns over national development. It’s a choice by regulators to allow this inequitable deployment to continue unchecked. It’s a choice by policymakers to treat digital infrastructure as a luxury rather than essential public infrastructure.
Calabar and dozens of other Nigerian cities are not asking for charity. They’re demanding what residents of Lagos and Abuja already enjoy: access to the connectivity infrastructure that modern economies require. The longer Nigeria tolerates this digital apartheid, the further behind it will fall in the global economy.









