
Vodacom South Africa has informed its post-paid customers that it will implement above-inflation price increases, attributing the move to rising network management expenses and broader inflationary pressures. The company said that, from 1 February, all contract packages will see a price adjustment, resulting in an average total bill increase of 4.7%. Device and hardware fees, value-added services, and out-of-bundle rates will remain unchanged.
The announcement comes just a day after MTN revealed increases to its own post-paid tariff plans. MTN said its adjustments would average 5.4%, slightly higher than Vodacom’s proposed changes.
Rising Costs Behind the Increases
According to Vodacom, the price increases reflect sustained inflationary pressure as well as escalating network and operating costs. The operator invested R11.6-billion in network infrastructure during the financial year ending 31 March and expects this figure to grow to R12-billion in the current year. MTN attributed its own price hikes to similar cost pressures.
Competitive Pressure in South Africa’s Mobile Market
Although they remain Africa’s largest mobile operators, both Vodacom Group and MTN Group have experienced declining performance in the South African market over the past year. This has coincided with heightened competition in the prepaid segment, where Telkom Mobile has been gaining traction with its data-focused offerings.
