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“DStv Faces Potential Subscriber Exodus Amid Stalled Warner Bros. Deal”

DStv may face a new wave of subscriber departures following its failure to reach a fresh distribution agreement with Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). The pay-TV operator, anticipating potential backlash, has alerted subscribers via text message that its current carriage deal with WBD will expire on December 31, 2025.

The firm holds that negotiations for a renewal are ongoing but have yet to produce an agreement. If talks fail, DStv viewers could lose access to several major WBD channels from January 1, 2026, including CNN, Discovery Channel, TLC, and Cartoon Network.

A Challenging Period for MultiChoice

The potential disruption comes at a particularly difficult time for MultiChoice. Recently acquired by Canal+, the broadcaster continues to grapple with declining subscriber numbers. Over the last two financial years, MultiChoice has lost 2.8 million active linear subscribers, including 1.2 million in 2025 alone—an 8 percent drop across South Africa and other African markets.

Nigeria has been especially hard hit. MultiChoice has shed 1.4 million subscribers over the past two years, largely attributed to repeated subscription price hikes that made the service increasingly unaffordable for many households. Rising inflation, economic hardship, and a growing preference for streaming alternatives have compounded the challenge.

Why the Warner Bros Deal Matters

The channels at risk include some of the most-watched content on DStv. Losing access to CNN International, Discovery Channel, TLC, and Cartoon Network would strip the platform of key news, lifestyle, and children’s programming that draw viewers beyond sports.

For families with children, channels like Cartoon Network and Discovery Family are major draws. For those seeking global news, losing CNN could be a deal-breaker. Lifestyle enthusiasts would feel the pinch if Food Network, HGTV, or Travel Channel went dark. In short, DStv’s value proposition could take a significant hit.

Subscriber Risks

If the deal collapses, viewers may respond by:

This comes after years of structural pressures on the pay-TV operator, including high subscription costs, economic challenges in multiple African markets, and increased competition from online streaming services.

Broader Implications for Africa’s Pay-TV Market

The stalling of the DStv–WBD deal signals larger trends in African media:

  1. Shift toward streaming and on-demand platforms: as viewers seek more flexible and cost-effective options.

  2. Greater scrutiny on value-for-money: households facing economic pressures are increasingly selective about entertainment spending.

  3. Potential destabilization of legacy pay-TV models: especially if other content providers reconsider their distribution partnerships.

  4. Opportunities for competitors: streaming services and local content providers could attract DStv customers dissatisfied with uncertain access to premium channels.

Conclusion

MultiChoice finds itself at a crossroads. The stalled Warner Bros. Discovery deal, threatening to remove 12 major channels from DStv, comes at a time when the broadcaster is already fighting to maintain its subscriber base. With millions of customers lost in recent years, failure to secure the deal—or to quickly replace the content—could trigger another wave of cancellations, weakening the platform’s foothold in Africa’s pay-TV market.

The next few weeks will be critical: DStv’s ability to either finalise the deal or offer compelling alternatives will determine whether subscribers stay loyal or begin the costly process of leaving.

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