Nigeria’s new FreeTV platform looks impressive at first glance. The app works reasonably well, the interface is cleaner than many expected, and for the first time in years, viewers can access a wide range of local TV stations in one place.
After decades of failed promises around Nigeria’s digital switch over (DSO), many see this as overdue progress.
But the real question is not whether FreeTV works.
The real question is whether it solves the actual problem of television access in Nigeria.
NBC presents FreeTV as part of Nigeria’s long-delayed digital migration strategy. On paper, it sounds transformative: more channels, wider access, improved digital broadcasting, and no monthly subscription fees.
But Nigeria’s economic reality complicates the picture.
FreeTV may be free to download, but it is not truly free to use. The platform depends heavily on mobile data and internet access. In a country where data costs remain expensive relative to income, power supply is unstable, and millions still struggle with basic living costs, streaming television becomes another recurring expense.
For many Nigerians, mobile data is no longer just entertainment spending. It supports work, banking, communication, school, and business activity. Television streaming must now compete against all of those priorities.
That creates a contradiction.
The original promise of digital switch over globally was mass access to better television through affordable digital terrestrial broadcasting, not necessarily internet-dependent streaming.
Countries that succeeded with DSO built systems people could access cheaply without constantly buying data bundles.
Nigeria’s current approach appears to shift part of the cost burden back onto viewers.
Then there is the deeper issue: content.
Adding more channels does not automatically create more value.
Many Nigerian television stations still struggle with repetitive programming, weak production budgets, recycled content, limited original formats, and poor scheduling. The danger is that FreeTV simply aggregates more channels without solving the quality problem behind them.
Today’s audiences are not comparing local television only against other Nigerian stations. They are comparing it against YouTube, TikTok, Netflix, podcasts, gaming, football streams, and social media platforms designed around speed, personalization, and constant engagement.
Distribution alone no longer guarantees relevance.
Another important question is whether FreeTV is truly a public broadcasting solution or primarily a commercial platform wrapped inside public policy language.
NBC presents it as a national solution tied to digital migration. But the structure increasingly resembles a commercial ecosystem involving platform operators, advertising, satellite distribution, audience monetisation, and content carriage.
There is nothing wrong with commercial sustainability. Broadcasting everywhere depends on it.
But after nearly two decades of missed deadlines, policy failures, and repeated promises around digital switch-over, Nigerians deserve transparency about ownership, economics, and who ultimately benefits from the platform.
FreeTV may represent progress. But it is still unclear whether this is the long-promised solution to Nigeria’s digital switch-over problem, or simply the latest commercial version of it.
@Aderemi Ogunpitan

