There was a time when telecom companies in Uganda fought over voice minutes and, later, data bundles. Today, the real battle is being waged in something far more lucrative: the movement of money. And if the latest 2025 numbers are anything to go by, the contest between Airtel Money and MTN MoMo is no longer about who has the biggest network—but who makes the most from the flows that ride on it.
Start with the headline numbers. MTN Mobile Money Uganda grew revenue by a robust 20.2% to Ushs 1.2 trillion, with profit after tax jumping 23.5% to Ushs 308.9 billion . Airtel Money, on the other hand, posted Ushs 334.1 billion in profit, ahead of MTN in absolute terms, but on a smaller revenue base of Ushs 1.02 trillion, growing at a slower 14.4%.
At first glance, MTN looks like the runaway winner. But look a little closer, and a more interesting story begins to emerge.
MTN is clearly winning the scale game. Its ecosystem now boasts 14.7 million subscribers, 241,000 agents and 115,000 merchants, with transaction values hitting a staggering Ushs 195.5 trillion . These are not just big numbers—they are the building blocks of a platform. The more users, agents and merchants you have, the harder it becomes for anyone else to dislodge you. In fintech, scale is not just an advantage; it is a moat.
But scale, as any seasoned investor will tell you, does not always translate into superior returns—at least not immediately.
That is where Airtel Money’s numbers begin to turn heads. Generating higher profits than MTN on lower revenue suggests a business that is squeezing more out of every shilling that passes through its system. In other words, Airtel may not yet match MTN in breadth, but it is arguably ahead on efficiency.
Part of the explanation lies in strategy. MTN is playing the long game. Its own disclosures show that advanced services now contribute over 30% of revenue, driven by lending, savings and payment innovations . It is investing heavily to turn MoMo from a payments pipe into a full-service financial supermarket.
Airtel, by contrast, appears more disciplined—less flashy, perhaps, but highly focused on the core business of transactions and fee extraction. That discipline shows up in the bottom line.
The balance sheet tells a similar story. MTN’s total assets surged 30% to Ushs 1.87 trillion , compared to Airtel’s 13.1% growth to Ushs 1.16 trillion. MTN is building muscle; Airtel is building margins.
Summary Comparison
| Metric | Airtel Money (2025) | MTN MoMo (2025) |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | Ushs 1.02 tn | Ushs 1.2 tn |
| Revenue Growth | +14.4% | +20.2% |
| Profit After Tax | Ushs 334.1 bn | Ushs 308.9 bn |
| Profit Growth | +7.4% | +23.5% |
| Total Assets | Ushs 1.16 tn | Ushs 1.87 tn |
| Asset Growth | +13.1% | +30.0% |
| Subscribers | Not disclosed | 14.7m (+6.5%) |
| Agents | Not disclosed | 241k (+13.5%) |
| Merchants | Not disclosed | 115k (+33.6%) |
| Transaction Value | Not disclosed | Ushs 195.5 tn (+23.3%) |
In the end, this is shaping up to be a classic market contest. MTN is building the rails of Uganda’s digital financial system—wide, deep and increasingly indispensable. Airtel is running a leaner operation, extracting more profit per transaction.
If history is any guide, both strategies can win. But rarely do they win equally. The real question is whether, over time, scale will swallow efficiency—or efficiency will force scale to behave.
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