Last updated: 8 May 2026
DStv is the largest pay-television operator in Africa. From a R150 entry-tier in South Africa to a ₦44,500 Premium subscription in Nigeria, the service spans more than 50 African markets, six pricing tiers per country, hundreds of live channels, and a fast-growing streaming layer. This guide collects what subscribers actually need to know in 2026: what each package includes, what it costs in your country, what hardware you need, and how DStv compares with the alternatives.
DStv is operated by MultiChoice, the Johannesburg-listed broadcasting group that originated the platform in 1995 as Africa’s first digital satellite TV service. MultiChoice today serves more than 21 million subscribers across the continent, with DStv as its premium tier alongside the lower-cost GOtv brand.
How DStv works
DStv is delivered three ways in 2026: traditional satellite (via a dish and decoder), streaming (via the DStv Stream app or a Streama decoder over broadband), and a hybrid combining both. Pricing is tier-based. Most countries offer six tiers, with prices set by the local MultiChoice subsidiary and typically adjusted once a year.
Standard tier names across most markets, in descending order: Premium, Compact Plus, Compact, Family, Access, and EasyView (or the local equivalent). Nigeria uses local tier names — Premium, Compact Plus, Compact, Confam, Yanga, Padi — reflecting DStv Nigeria’s separate consumer branding. Ghana and Kenya replace EasyView with Lite at the entry tier.

DStv South Africa: packages and prices
South Africa is DStv’s home market and the largest by subscriber base. Six tiers are available, all delivered through MultiChoice South Africa.
| Package | Channels | Monthly price |
|---|---|---|
| Premium | 135+ | R979 |
| Compact Plus | 115+ | R659 |
| Compact | 100+ | R479 |
| Family | 75+ | R339 |
| Access | 66+ | R150 |
| EasyView | 25+ | R29 |
The Premium tier is the only one carrying every SuperSport channel, the M-Net premium drama and movie channels (M-Net, M-Net Movies Premiere, Action+, Smile), most international news brands (CNN, BBC News, Sky News, Al Jazeera English). Compact Plus drops Premium-exclusive sports rights but keeps most general entertainment. Compact and Family are the volume tiers most South African households subscribe to. Access and EasyView retain the major free-to-air carriages (SABC, e.tv) plus a thin selection of paid channels — appropriate when the household primarily watches free content but wants a basic decoder for picture quality and extra channel breadth. Customers can also see DStv Streaming pricing options, which include streaming-only contracts.
DStv Nigeria: packages and prices
Nigeria has DStv’s largest African subscriber base outside South Africa. Local tier names differ — Confam, Yanga and Padi replace Family, Access and EasyView at the lower end — reflecting MultiChoice Nigeria’s deliberate localisation.
| Package | Monthly price |
|---|---|
| Premium | ₦44,500 |
| Compact Plus | ₦30,000 |
| Compact | ₦19,000 |
| Confam | ₦11,000 |
| Yanga | ₦6,000 |
| Padi | ₦4,400 |
Nigerian DStv pricing has been a recurring subject of regulatory and consumer attention. The Nigerian Communications Commission and consumer protection bodies have intervened on occasion when MultiChoice Nigeria announced subscription increases without notice. Subscribers should expect the price list to track inflation and exchange-rate movements, and to be reviewed periodically.
DStv Ghana: packages and prices
| Package | Monthly price |
|---|---|
| Premium | GHS 865 |
| Compact Plus | GHS 570 |
| Compact | GHS 380 |
| Family | GHS 190 |
| Access | GHS 99 |
| Lite | GHS 58 |
Ghana retains the standard SADC tier names (Family, Access) at the mid and lower end and uses Lite as the entry point. Ghanaian subscribers also have access to Multi TV, a free-to-air competitor on satellite, which captures a meaningful share of the lower-tier market that Lite is priced against.
DStv Kenya: packages and prices
| Package | Monthly price |
|---|---|
| Premium | KSh 11,700 |
| Compact Plus | KSh 7,300 |
| Compact | KSh 4,200 |
| Family | KSh 2,250 |
| Access | KSh 1,450 |
| Lite | KSh 750 |
Kenya is DStv’s flagship East African market. Pricing is reviewed annually by MultiChoice Kenya and is published in Kenyan Shilling.
Other key African markets
Six other markets where tech.africa readers regularly research DStv pricing — Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and Botswana — are detailed in the table below. All use the standard six-tier structure with local currency pricing.
| Country | Premium | Compact Plus | Compact | Family | Access | Lite |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethiopia | ETB 7,900 | ETB 3,299 | ETB 2,299 | ETB 1,699 | ETB 999 | ETB 569 |
| Zimbabwe | USD 75 | USD 46 | USD 32 | USD 21 | USD 16 | USD 9 |
| Uganda | UGX 320,000 | UGX 185,000 | UGX 120,000 | UGX 76,000 | UGX 49,000 | UGX 17,000 |
| Tanzania | TSh 189,000 | TSh 118,000 | TSh 68,000 | TSh 40,000 | TSh 27,500 | TSh 11,500 |
| Zambia | K 1,670 | K 1,090 | K 720 | K 485 | K 255 | K 165 |
| Botswana | BWP 860 | BWP 595 | BWP 450 | BWP 295 | BWP 140 | BWP 85 |
Zimbabwe is the unusual case: MultiChoice prices DStv there in US dollars rather than Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), reflecting the country’s de-facto dollarisation. Subscribers pay in USD through authorised channels including EcoCash and bank transfer. Ethiopia, Botswana, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia each price in their local currency, with adjustments tracking inflation rather than a fixed schedule.
Local channel mixes vary across these markets. Ugandan Premium subscribers get NTV Uganda and NBS as part of the package; Tanzanian and Zambian tiers carry local public broadcasters; Ethiopian tiers include EBC, ESAT and Walta TV; Zimbabwean tiers include ZBC channels.
Beyond these ten markets, DStv also operates in Angola, Cameroon, Eswatini, Lesotho, Liberia, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda and Senegal, all on the same six-tier structure with country-specific pricing and channel mixes. Subscribers there should consult the relevant dstv.com country page for current local pricing.
DStv channels
DStv channels fall into broad genre categories that determine which tier carries them.
- Sports — SuperSport carries Premier League, UEFA Champions League, La Liga, Serie A, English football lower divisions, F1, MotoGP, golf majors, tennis grand slams, plus African football including AFCON and the CAF Champions League. The Premium tier holds the full SuperSport bouquet.
- Movies — M-Net Movies Premiere, M-Net Movies Action+, M-Net Movies Smile, plus international brands including AMC, Sony Movies, MGM and Hallmark.
- Series and drama — M-Net, FOX, AMC, Universal TV, Studio Universal.
- News — CNN International, BBC News, Sky News, Al Jazeera English, eNCA, Newzroom Afrika, NTA International, plus regional news brands per market.
- Kids — Cartoon Network, Boomerang, Disney Channel, Disney Junior, Nickelodeon, Nick Jr., DreamWorks, Da Vinci.
- Local — SABC 1, 2, 3 (South Africa), STV (Nigeria, multiple Africa Magic channels), Channel One Ghana, Citizen TV (Kenya), and equivalents per market.
- Religion, lifestyle, music, documentary, factual, Indian/Asia bouquets at relevant tiers.
Subscribers wanting to confirm whether a specific channel is on their tier should consult the dstv.com country page; channel carriage occasionally moves up or down a tier as MultiChoice negotiates new content rights.
DStv decoders
DStv supports four decoder generations in 2026, each with a different feature set and price point.
- DStv Explora Ultra — the flagship 4K UHD decoder. Records up to four channels simultaneously, integrates the DStv Stream app, supports Netflix, YouTube and DStv Now. Available in all major African markets.
- DStv Explora 3 — the previous-generation HD PVR with 1TB storage and similar app integrations except 4K playback.
- DStv HD decoder — entry-level satellite-only decoder for households that don’t need recording functionality. Cheapest hardware option.
- DStv Streama — the streaming-only set-top box, launched in 2020. Connects to broadband (Wi-Fi or Ethernet) and delivers DStv content over the internet, plus YouTube, JOOX and (in some markets) Netflix without satellite installation. Designed for fibre-served households.
The Streama option in particular reshaped DStv’s go-to-market in densely populated African cities, where fibre rollouts have made satellite installation unnecessary for many subscribers.
DStv Streaming and the DStv app
DStv Streaming is the standalone streaming product, launched in South Africa in 2020 and now expanded to most African markets. Subscribers can choose streaming-only packages at slightly lower prices than the equivalent satellite tier, watch on smartphone, tablet, PC, smart TV, Apple TV, Chromecast or the Streama decoder, and switch packages monthly without a contract. Streaming-only contracts are month-to-month rather than the 12 or 24-month commitments that come with satellite-and-decoder bundles.
The MyDStv app and the DStv Now web service give existing satellite subscribers access to live TV and catch-up content as part of their subscription, including across free DStv Now channels available even on entry-tier packages.
DStv vs the alternatives
African pay-TV is increasingly contested. The main alternatives sit at different price and feature points, and most subscribers consider at least one of them.
| Service | Type | Channel count | Footprint | Entry price (SA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DStv | Satellite + streaming | up to 135+ | 50+ African markets | R29 (EasyView) |
| GOtv | Digital terrestrial | up to 80+ | SA, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Zambia, more | R85 (GOtv Lite) |
| StarSat | Satellite | up to 130+ | SA, Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, more | R125 (Smart) |
| OpenView | Free satellite (no subscription) | 23 free channels | South Africa | R0 (decoder once-off) |
DStv competes directly with GOtv (its lower-cost MultiChoice sibling) and StarSat (operated by China’s StarTimes) on satellite or terrestrial reach. OpenView occupies the free-to-air market and is increasingly significant as a complementary choice for cost-sensitive households.
How to subscribe to DStv
DStv subscription is straightforward.
- Choose a country site (e.g. dstv.com/en-za/ for South Africa) and the package that fits your budget and viewing needs.
- For satellite: select decoder + installation. Installation requires line-of-sight to the relevant Intelsat satellite. MultiChoice operates an installer network in each market.
- For streaming-only: download the DStv Stream app or use dstv.com on a desktop browser, complete sign-up with an ID number and email, and pay with a credit or debit card.
- Provide payment method — debit order, credit card, mobile money or in-person at MultiChoice agents and partner retailers depending on the market.
- Receive activation. Streaming activates within minutes; satellite within 24-48 hours after installation.
Bills can typically be paid through the MyDStv app, the country website, mobile money (M-Pesa, MoMo, etc. depending on market), bank transfer, or at retailers like Pep, Shoprite, supermarket chains and dedicated MultiChoice walk-in centres.
Free channels available with DStv
Even on the lowest-tier subscription — or with a DStv decoder that’s not actively subscribed — some channels are free to view across most markets. These typically include the local broadcaster (SABC channels in South Africa, NTA in Nigeria, GBC in Ghana, KBC in Kenya), the parliamentary channel where applicable, and a handful of free-to-air religious and community channels. DStv documents the free-channel set per market on its country sites; we cover the South African case in detail in the DStv Now free channels guide.
Frequently asked questions
Can I switch DStv packages mid-month?
Yes. Both upgrades and downgrades take effect immediately, with the difference pro-rated against the days remaining in the billing cycle. Streaming-only packages can be changed monthly without restriction.
Does DStv work without a satellite dish?
Yes, via DStv Streaming or the DStv Streama decoder. Both deliver content over broadband and require no satellite installation. A reliable internet connection of at least 10 Mbps is recommended for HD playback.
How many decoders can I link to one subscription?
Up to three decoders can be linked under XtraView on most tier packages. The primary decoder pays the package fee and access fee; secondary decoders pay only the access fee.
Can I take my DStv subscription between African countries?
No. Each MultiChoice subsidiary operates its own subscriber base, billing currency and channel mix. Moving between markets requires cancelling in the origin country and re-subscribing in the destination country.
What’s the cheapest way to watch DStv?
The DStv EasyView (or country-equivalent Lite/Padi) tier is the cheapest paid option. For a no-subscription alternative, OpenView in South Africa offers 23 free satellite channels with a one-off decoder purchase.
Pricing verified against DStv’s official country sites on 8 May 2026. Prices and channel mixes are subject to occasional revision by the local MultiChoice subsidiary; this page is reviewed every 6 months for accuracy.




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