In a massive, historic leap for the country’s media landscape, Nigeria is officially launching FreeTV today, June 17, 2026. The national digital television platform is engineered to grant households across the country total access to high-quality television without any monthly subscription fees.
The landmark rollout, which was formally announced by the presidency via a State House Digital release on June 16, 2026, represents a critical milestone in President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda. The agenda places a massive priority on technology adoption, local enterprise, and economic inclusion for everyday citizens.
Goodbye Analogue: What is FreeTV?
FreeTV is the core driving engine of Nigeria’s aggressive Digital Switch-Over (DSO) programme. It is explicitly designed to ensure that no Nigerian household is left behind as the entire nation completely migrates away from legacy analogue broadcasting to crisp, modern digital signals.
Key Features of the FreeTV Platform:
- Over 100 Channels for Free: Subscribers will get immediate access to over 100 national, regional, and state channels spanning news, sports, movies, music, children’s programming, and educational content.
- Indigenous Language Hubs: The platform features dedicated, specialized channels broadcasting natively in Yoruba, Hausa, and Igbo.
- Multi-Platform Access: The service is being deployed simultaneously via satellite, terrestrial transmission, and the official FreeTV mobile app, ensuring seamless coverage for major cities, rural communities, and previously disconnected zones alike.
- No New TV Required: Nigerians do not need to buy expensive new television sets. Existing TVs will work perfectly fine using compatible DVB-T2 or DVB-S2 decoders, and those who already own free-to-air decoders may not need to buy any new hardware at all.
A Massive Boost for the Creative Economy
Speaking ahead of the highly anticipated launch, the Director-General of the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), Mr. Charles Ebuebu, emphasized that FreeTV bridges the gap between income levels and digital opportunities.
“With FreeTV, families across Nigeria can enjoy quality digital television without a monthly subscription, while our local content producers, technicians and young creatives gain new platforms and new jobs,” Ebuebu stated.
To fully back this broadcast ecosystem, the federal platform will heavily support regional production studios across major hubs—including Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Enugu, Kano, and Benin. This decentralized infrastructure is tipped to generate thousands of fresh jobs for local content producers, sound engineers, camera operators, editors, and technicians.
The Final Countdown to 2028
With the FreeTV rollout now fully active, the federal government has set the final, definitive analogue switch-off date for December 31, 2028. Citizens are being strongly encouraged to get ahead of the curve by checking their decoder compatibility and downloading the FreeTV app immediately.
For official inquiries, help lines, and configuration setup, the public can visit www.freetv.ng, email dso@nbc.gov.ng, call 07003887277, or drop by any of the nearest NBC zonal or state offices.
This is a massive development! Imagine watching over 100 channels with clearer pictures and zero monthly DSTV or GOTV subscription bills. Do you think FreeTV will completely change television in Nigeria? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section below!
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