MTN revenues touched the $1 billion last year, making it the first company in Ugandan history to do so.
The telecom giant reported sh3.6 trillion in total revenue for the year ended December 2025, setting it on the cusp of the billion-dollar club. A year earlier revenues stood at about sh3.15 trillion, meaning the company expanded its topline by roughly 14 percent year-on-year.
In a country where most companies still measure revenues in billions rather than trillions, that milestone is more than a corporate bragging right. It is a signal of how deeply telecom infrastructure has become woven into Uganda’s economic life...
There is also
a certain symmetry to the moment. MTN Uganda is not only the first company in Uganda to generate more than $1 billion in
annual revenues, it was also the first Ugandan company to cross the $1 billion market capitalisation
mark when it listed on the Uganda Securities Exchange in
December 2021.
In other
words, MTN first entered the billion-dollar club through investor belief. Today it has
entered it again through economic performance.
But the real
story behind those revenues lies in a transformation that has happened in less
than three decades.
Thirty years
ago Uganda barely had a telecom sector in the modern sense. Fixed telephone
lines were scarce and expensive, confined largely to government offices and a
handful of large companies. Getting a landline could take months.
Today telecom
networks carry the lifeblood of the modern economy.
The numbers
released alongside MTN’s results illustrate that shift. The company now serves 24.2 million customers, up
from roughly 21.6 million the previous year.
Active data users have climbed to
14.7 million, continuing the steady growth seen in recent years
as smartphones spread across the country. Meanwhile mobile money users have reached about 12
million, up from about 11.3 million in 2024.
Each of these
indicators reflects the widening role of telecom infrastructure in everyday
economic life.
But perhaps
the most striking statistic lies in the fintech ecosystem built around MTN MoMo.
In comments
accompanying the results, MTN Uganda chief executive Sylvia Mulinge revealed just
how large that ecosystem has become.
“The volume
of transactions on our platform increased by 16.8 percent to five billion while
the value of transactions increased by 23.3 percent to sh195.5trillion”.”
Those numbers
deserve a moment of reflection.
Uganda’s GDP
is roughly sh200 trillion.
In other words, the value of transactions flowing through MTN's mobile money
platform is now approaching the size of the entire economy...
And that
number itself has been growing steadily. A few years ago mobile money
transaction values were below sh160 trillion.
Today they are brushing against UGX 200 trillion.
Telecom
networks are therefore no longer just carrying voice calls and WhatsApp
messages.
They are
carrying the financial bloodstream of the
economy.
Every boda
fare paid digitally, every school fee sent to a boarding student, every
electricity token purchased through a phone flows through this invisible
infrastructure.
MTN’s
financial performance reflects that structural shift.
The company
reported profit after tax of about sh678.8
billion, up from roughly sh641.5 billion the
previous year. Earnings per share rose to sh30.3, compared with about sh28.7 the year before.
Those gains
may appear incremental at first glance, but they underline the steady
compounding of a business that now sits at the centre of the digital economy.
Mulinge
herself linked the company’s revenue growth to rising connectivity and digital
adoption.
Telecom
growth is therefore not simply sector growth.
It is economic growth expressed through digital
infrastructure.
When farmers
receive produce payments through mobile money, telecom networks earn
transaction fees. When families send remittances across the country, telecom
infrastructure carries the payment. When small businesses pay suppliers
digitally, telecom networks facilitate the exchange.
Telecom
infrastructure has quietly become the plumbing of the
modern economy.
Mulinge
framed the company’s trajectory within MTN Group’s broader strategic ambition.
“As we
conclude the Ambition 2025 journey, I am pleased with the sustained progress we
have made towards building the largest and most valuable platform business in
Uganda.”
The phrase platform business captures
the transformation underway.
The old
telecom model revolved around voice calls and SMS. The new model revolves
around data consumption, fintech
services and digital platforms.
Behind the
scenes the infrastructure supporting this transformation continues to expand.
MTN now operates 549 network sites,
while 4G population coverage has
reached about 88.6 percent, up from roughly 86 percent last year.
These
investments are capital intensive but essential.
Without the
network backbone, there is no digital economy.
For
investors, MTN’s results carry additional significance. Since its 2021 listing,
the company has become the flagship stock of the Uganda Securities Exchange.
More than 22,000 Ugandan investors
participated in the IPO — many of them entering the stock market for the first
time.
The company
has also maintained a strong dividend policy, distributing over sh543 billion in dividends,
reinforcing its reputation as one of the exchange’s most dependable yield
stocks.
And if the
trajectory of fintech, data consumption and digital payments continues, telecom
networks may prove to be the single most
important piece of economic infrastructure built in Uganda since Independence.