The network achieved exceptional download peaks in markets such as Anambra (82.3 Mbps) and Oyo (80.0 Mbps) during Q4 2025. Notably, its rural download speed of 24.9 Mbps surpassed its urban performance of 18.5 Mbps, indicating a concentration of effective network capacity in less-congested rural zones.
According to the Q4 2025 Industry Performance Report by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and Ookla, T2mobile (formerly 9mobile) has emerged as the leader in rural network speeds across Nigeria. The operator recorded a median rural download speed of 24.9 Mbps, significantly outperforming competitors such as MTN Nigeria (15.8 Mbps), Airtel Nigeria (10.6 Mbps), and Globacom (9.5 Mbps). The national rural average stood at 11.0 Mbps, up from 8.5 Mbps the previous year, highlighting T2mobile’s role in raising connectivity standards outside urban centers.
T2mobile’s strong rural performance is attributed to several strategic initiatives. The company entered a three-year spectrum lease agreement with MTN Nigeria on October 1, 2025, acquiring 5 MHz in the 900 MHz band and 15 MHz in the 1800 MHz band. In addition, a national roaming deal allows T2 subscribers to access MTN’s infrastructure, addressing previous coverage and capacity limitations. The operator has also invested in targeted infrastructure outside urban centers and signed a multi-million-dollar network modernization deal with Huawei.
While T2mobile leads in rural median speeds, its performance varies across the country. The network achieved exceptional download peaks in markets such as Anambra (82.3 Mbps) and Oyo (80.0 Mbps) during Q4 2025. Notably, its rural download speed of 24.9 Mbps surpassed its urban performance of 18.5 Mbps, indicating a concentration of effective network capacity in less-congested rural zones.
Despite these gains, T2mobile remains Nigeria’s fourth-largest mobile operator, with a market share of approximately 1.8% as of November 2025. The NCC also noted that a 40% performance gap persists nationally between urban and rural areas, particularly in upload speeds and latency, underscoring the continued need for investment in rural connectivity.

