South Africa’s telecoms industry has a long history of dressing up ordinary deals and sometimes even bad ones like revolutionary breakthroughs, so when MTN announced a new month-to-month product called Pi on Monday with up to 20GB for R1 per month for the first three months, the obvious response was simple: alright, what’s the catch?
To MTN’s credit though, Pi is more than just another promo.
It’s a new app-based mobile and home internet offering designed around flexibility, letting users manage multiple lines under one account without being locked into a long-term contract.
The mobile packages include:

New customers on the lower-tier plans can get 5GB, 10GB or 20GB for R1 per month for the first three months, which is obviously the headline grabber here.
MTN is also bundling in month-to-month home internet, with packages starting at R399 for 200GB, going up to R699for 1TB on 5G.
The more interesting part, though, is the structure. Pi allows one person to manage up to 10 lines from a single app, set usage limits, and handle both mobile and home internet in one place. That may not sound exciting in a press release, but in real life, it speaks directly to a very real frustration for South Africans: households trying to stay connected without the usual telco admin and billing chaos.
Still, this is South Africa, so skepticism is not optional.
The R1 promo will get attention, but what matters is whether the service still feels like good value once the introductory period ends, and whether the app, billing and network experience are as smooth as MTN is promising.
South Africans don’t just need another “great offer.” They need networks to stop making everyday connectivity feel way more painful than it should.
And if Pi can do that and not just be another Melon Mobile, then MTN might be onto something.