Let's start with something that sounds made-up but absolutely isn't: South Africa is connected to more submarine cable systems than any other country in sub-Saharan Africa. These are the massive cables running along the ocean floor — the physical backbone of the internet — and South Africa has more of them landing on its shores than anywhere else on the continent.
That alone would make it interesting. But there's more. Much more. South Africa also hosts the vast majority of Africa's large-scale data centre capacity. It has the highest fixed broadband penetration rate in sub-Saharan Africa. Its fibre optic network is the most extensive in the region. And its mobile internet infrastructure serves not just South Africans, but acts as a gateway for internet traffic across landlocked neighbouring countries.
In short: if Africa's internet were a body, South Africa would be doing a disproportionate amount of the heavy lifting. Let's get into the evidence.
Take that last comparison and sit with it for a moment. Sub-Saharan Africa's average internet penetration sits around 36%. South Africa is at roughly 70%. That's not a minor gap — that's the difference between a country where most people are online and one where most people aren't. And South Africa sits firmly in the former category, which, on a continent where connectivity is still a real challenge in many places, is remarkable.
When people talk about "internet access in Africa," they're usually painting with a very broad brush across 54 wildly different countries. Lumping South Africa in with, say, a landlocked nation with no submarine cable access and GDP per capita a fraction of South Africa's is like comparing Norway's infrastructure with that of a country without a coastline or significant industry. The continent is enormous. The variation is enormous. And South Africa is firmly at one end of that spectrum.
South Africa's Submarine Cable Advantage
Here's how the internet actually gets from one country to another: not through satellites (mostly), but through cables. Extraordinarily long, extraordinarily thick cables sitting on the seabed, carrying data at the speed of light through fibre optic threads thinner than a human hair.
South Africa has become the landing point for an unusually high number of these cable systems. Its geographic position at the southern tip of Africa makes it a natural waypoint for cables routing between Europe and Asia — cables that go around the continent, not through it, tend to dip towards South Africa's coastline. And every cable that lands in South Africa is a direct link to the global internet backbone.
The 2Africa cable system, which began landing at multiple African locations in 2023–2024, is one of the longest submarine cable systems ever built — spanning approximately 45,000 kilometres and designed to carry capacity that dwarfs what was available across the entire continent a decade ago. South Africa is one of its landing points. This is not a coincidence. It's a consequence of South Africa's established infrastructure ecosystem making it the obvious destination for new cables wanting to serve the African market.
Landlocked African countries — and there are 16 of them on the continent — have no choice but to route their international internet traffic through coastal neighbours. Several of them route through South Africa specifically. So when you're somewhere in southern Africa accessing an international website, there's a reasonable chance the data took a trip through South African infrastructure first, regardless of which country you're in.
The Fibre Revolution
(Yes, Really — In Africa)
Here's one that might surprise you: South Africa has a seriously extensive fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) network, particularly in urban areas. Multiple network operators have been in a rollout race for years, competing to wire up suburbs and city centres across major metropolitan areas. As of 2023–2024, South Africa had one of the highest rates of FTTH deployment on the continent.
Speeds available on these fibre connections reach up to 1 Gbps (1,000 Mbps) in some residential plans — which, to put it plainly, is fast. Properly fast. Not "fast for Africa" (a phrase that, frankly, should be retired). Just fast. Comparable to what you'd find in many European or Asian markets, at least at the top end of the market in well-connected areas.
South Africa's fibre buildout has been driven primarily by private sector competition, with multiple operators building parallel networks and competing for the same customers — which sounds inefficient but has actually accelerated deployment significantly. The business case exists because South Africa has a large enough urban middle class with sufficient disposable income to subscribe to fibre plans. This is the economic precondition that makes private fibre rollout viable. Many other African markets simply don't have the same density of potential paying subscribers, which is why fibre deployment has been slower — it's an infrastructure economics problem as much as a technology problem.
Data Centres: The Continent's Server Room
Where do you put a data centre? You put it somewhere with reliable power, stable infrastructure, legal certainty, skilled labour, and good connectivity. South Africa ticks more of these boxes than almost anywhere else on the continent, which is why it became the de facto home for Africa's large-scale data centre industry.
Estimates based on industry reports suggest South Africa accounts for over 60% of the continent's total data centre capacity. The cities of Johannesburg and Cape Town, in particular, host the highest concentration of carrier-neutral and enterprise data centres on the continent. Johannesburg's position as the economic centre of southern Africa — and its existing business infrastructure — makes it a natural location. Cape Town, meanwhile, serves as a landing point for Indian Ocean cable systems and has developed its own significant data centre cluster.
Here's a slightly absurd consequence of South Africa's data centre dominance: for many years, African internet users from other countries would experience better performance connecting to servers physically located in South Africa than connecting to "African" content stored on servers in Europe. A Kenyan user accessing a South African website might actually get better latency than accessing a European-hosted site about Africa. The continent's internet infrastructure had, in a wonderfully circular fashion, made South Africa the most "local" option for much of sub-Saharan Africa's online content.
The data centre industry in South Africa has been growing rapidly, with significant investment from global cloud computing providers who have recognised that the South African market — and by extension the broader African market served through South African infrastructure — is worth building for. This investment creates a reinforcing cycle: more data centre capacity attracts more content and services to be hosted locally, which improves performance for end users, which justifies more investment.
"South Africa has effectively become the internet hub of sub-Saharan Africa — not by grand design, but because its existing infrastructure advantages compounded over time into an unassailable head start."
— An accurate summary of what the infrastructure data shows.Mobile Internet: Where Millions Come Online
Fixed fibre broadband is impressive, but it's mobile internet that has actually connected most South Africans — and most Africans generally — to the internet. South Africa's mobile network infrastructure is among the most developed on the continent, with near-ubiquitous 4G coverage in urban areas and significant 5G rollout underway.
The country had multiple operators competing on 5G networks from 2020 onwards, making it one of the first in Africa to roll out 5G commercially. As of 2024, 5G coverage in major South African cities is genuine, available, and functional — not merely announced and theoretical, which has occasionally been a distinction worth making in the region.
Facts That Make You Go "Wait, Really?"
Tap each card to reveal the fact. Bonus points if you already knew any of them.
South Africa's 4G/LTE network covers over 85% of the population, making it one of the highest 4G coverage rates in sub-Saharan Africa, according to GSMA Intelligence data.
Johannesburg and Cape Town consistently rank among the top African cities for internet speed benchmarks in Speedtest Global Index data — regularly placing in the continent's top 3–5.
South Africa has coastline on two oceans — the Atlantic and Indian — which gives it natural geographic access to cable systems routing on both sides of the continent. Very few African nations share this dual-ocean advantage.
South Africa has one of Africa's most active tech startup ecosystems, with several globally significant venture investments originating from — or passing through — Cape Town and Johannesburg's tech districts.
The Digital Divide
That Still Very Much Exists
It would be dishonest to write about South Africa's internet infrastructure leadership without addressing the flip side: the country has one of the most pronounced digital divides on the continent. The fast fibre connections, the well-equipped data centres, the 5G rollout — these things are heavily concentrated in urban, wealthier areas. Rural South Africa is a different story.
Millions of South Africans, particularly in rural and peri-urban areas, still lack meaningful broadband access. Mobile data remains expensive relative to average incomes — a factor that limits how extensively people can actually use the internet, even when they technically have access. Having a 4G signal on your phone is different from having affordable data to use on it.
South Africa's position at the top of African internet infrastructure rankings does not mean that access is universally good or affordable within the country. Urban-rural disparities are significant. The cost of data per gigabyte, while declining, remains relatively high compared to income levels in lower-income segments of the population. Being the most connected country in sub-Saharan Africa is significant — and simultaneously doesn't mean the connectivity challenges are solved. Both things are true.
How South Africa Built This Infrastructure
South Africa's internet infrastructure dominance didn't appear overnight. It's the result of decades of investment, geography, and economic factors.
South Africa vs The Rest of Africa
Here's where we can actually put the comparison into concrete terms, because the gap between South Africa and even the next-best-connected sub-Saharan African nations is significant across most metrics.
| Country / Region | Internet Penetration | Submarine Cables | 4G Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇿🇦 South Africa | ~68–72% | 11+ systems | 85%+ pop. |
| 🇳🇬 Nigeria | ~55–60% | 6–8 systems | ~65% pop. |
| 🇰🇪 Kenya | ~40–45% | 4–5 systems | ~62% pop. |
| 🇬🇭 Ghana | ~50–55% | 4–5 systems | ~70% pop. |
| 🌍 Sub-Saharan Avg. | ~36–40% | Varies widely | ~45–50% |
Nigeria and Ghana have been making impressive infrastructure progress, and they deserve credit for it. Nigeria in particular — with the continent's largest population and a massive, fast-growing tech sector — is catching up. Kenya has been notable for mobile money innovation and has significant connectivity infrastructure. But across the specific metrics that define "most developed internet infrastructure" — submarine cable access, data centre capacity, fixed broadband, 4G coverage, internet penetration rate — South Africa still leads the sub-Saharan field by a meaningful margin in 2024–2025.
Internet penetration rate: South Africa at ~70% versus the sub-Saharan average of ~36%. Data centre capacity share: South Africa hosts over 60% of the continent's large-scale capacity. Submarine cable systems: 11+ landing in South Africa, more than any other sub-Saharan country. You can pick any single metric and argue about the nuances. Pick all three simultaneously and the picture is fairly clear. South Africa is the region's digital infrastructure leader — by a wide margin, on multiple dimensions, consistently measured over time.
- International Telecommunication Union (ITU) — ICT Development Index and Connectivity Statistics
- GSMA Intelligence — The Mobile Economy: Sub-Saharan Africa
- World Bank — Internet Users (% of Population) — World Development Indicators
- Telegeography — Submarine Cable Map and Almanac
- Ookla Speedtest Global Index — Global Fixed and Mobile Internet Speed Benchmarks
- Internet World Stats — Internet Usage Statistics for Africa
- IDATE / DatacenterHawk — Africa Data Centre Market Reports (industry estimates referenced in trade press)
- Research ICT Africa — African ICT Policy Research and Data
All content on this page is intended strictly for general educational and informational purposes. Statistics, estimates, and figures cited are sourced from publicly available reports and data sources, and are subject to change. The data presented represents estimates and approximations from industry and institutional sources and should not be relied upon for commercial, investment, or policy decisions without consulting primary sources. Random Internet Facts makes no warranties regarding the accuracy or completeness of any third-party data referenced herein.