South Africa’s youth are demonstrating how small data can lead to significant impact. Across the country, young people are leveraging the data-efficient Opera Mini browser—and especially the 3GB of free monthly data it provides—to fuel digital kindness. They engage in activities like virtual volunteering, streaming educational content, raising awareness for social causes, and offering online mentoring, all powered by this accessible digital resource.
Opera Mini is known for its unique data compression technology, which saves up to 90% of a user’s data.1 That means a single 3GB bundle can deliver the equivalent to up to 30GB of browsing power, turning what might seem like a limited resource into a powerful tool for connection, learning, and giving back. Watching an hour of YouTube, for example, costs 75MB worth of data on Opera Mini instead of around 500MB on other mobile web browsers. Users can read around 100 news articles for 30MB in total, or message and share files for a fraction of the data cost thanks to blocked background data.
“Opera Mini isn’t just helping young South Africans stay online – we’re helping them make their data matter,” says Kseniia Sycheva, Senior Global Communications Manager at Opera Mini. “For some, 3GB might not be crucial, but for many it’s life-changing – it enables people to join online volunteer networks, run grassroots campaigns for the causes they care about, and more. That’s the kind of digital inclusion we’re proud to support.”
Despite infrastructure improvements, South Africa ranks 136th out of 173 countries on the ITU’s 2023 Mobile Data Affordability Index, and youth are among the hardest hit. While 1GB of data may cost as little as R20, that price still competes with food, transport, and electricity. According to GSMA, only 28% of Sub-Saharan Africans use mobile internet, despite 85% coverage. The real gap isn’t infrastructure, it’s affordability and digital inclusion – which is exactly what Opera Mini is enabling.
“For low-income youth, even a R10 or R20 data bundle competes with basic necessities,” said Sycheva. “That’s why, in addition to giving away 3GB of free data every month, we’re trying to make sure that our users can stretch that data as much as possible – in fact, further than any other browser.”
With Opera Mini, users can access platforms such as YouTube, WhatsApp, and educational portals while consuming significantly less data, giving young people the freedom to explore opportunities, gain knowledge, and engage with causes close to their hearts. During Mandela Month, this has translated into more widespread digital inclusion across the country, whether it’s hosting virtual study sessions, offering mental health support via messaging apps, or fundraising for community upliftment, all within the limits of an affordable data plan.
“In a world where giving back is increasingly digital, Opera Mini is proving that inclusion doesn’t require unlimited bandwidth – just the right tools and the will to make a difference. With 3GB, a cause, and a community, young South Africans are doing extraordinary things – just imagine what’s possible when every megabyte becomes a moment to connect and create change,” concludes Sycheva.