
As Africa’s radio broadcasting industry undergoes an unprecedented transformation, a new industry intelligence report published by this platform has identified trust as the defining factor for the medium’s long-term sustainability, relevance, and commercial success.
The report, The Future of African Radio, released following the successful conclusion of the 7th Radio Broadcasting Convention – Africa 2026, reveals that while artificial intelligence, digital platforms, audience fragmentation and new revenue models are fundamentally reshaping the broadcasting landscape, radio’s greatest competitive advantage remains its longstanding credibility and deep-rooted relationship with local communities.
Developed from the collective insights of more than 100 broadcasting executives, media leaders, regulators, technology providers and industry practitioners representing eleven African markets, the report provides one of the continent’s most comprehensive assessments of the opportunities and challenges facing radio between now and 2030.
According to the report, the question confronting African broadcasters is no longer whether radio can survive in the digital age. Instead, the industry must determine how to modernise successfully while preserving the public confidence that has made radio Africa’s most trusted and accessible medium for generations.
The report argues that radio continues to occupy a unique position within African societies by providing credible local news, reliable public information, emergency communications and culturally relevant storytelling. However, the report warns that this trust should never be taken for granted.
Commenting on the report, Mr Benjamin Pius, CEO of Broadcast Media Africa, said the industry now stands at one of the most important crossroads in its history: “African radio is entering a new era of transformation where technology, audience behaviour and commercial realities are changing faster than ever before. Yet throughout all of this change, one principle remains constant—trust. It is the foundation upon which successful broadcasters build lasting relationships with audiences, advertisers and communities.”
Beyond examining editorial credibility, the report identifies five additional strategic forces reshaping African radio: the rapid adoption of Artificial Intelligence, increasingly fragmented audience behaviour, the urgent need for new monetisation models, the sustainability challenges facing community radio, and the growing gap between technological innovation and regulatory development.
Broadcast Media Africa says the report is intended to serve as a strategic resource for broadcasters, regulators, policymakers, technology providers, investors and industry stakeholders seeking to better understand the evolving dynamics of Africa’s radio broadcasting sector and to support informed decision-making over the coming years.
To access the Full Report, please click HERE.
To access the Radio Broadcasters Convention Post-Event Briefing Report, click HERE.












