Google Launches Affordable AI Plus Plan in Nigeria, 39 Other Countries

Google Launches Affordable AI Plus Plan in Nigeria, 39 Other Countries


Google has rolled out its new AI Plus subscription plan across 40 countries, including Nigeria, Angola, Bangladesh, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Nepal, the Philippines, Senegal, Uganda, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe. 

The company is making advanced AI tools more accessible in markets where high subscription costs have limited adoption.

The Plus plan, priced at roughly $5 per month in most regions, offers a six-month, 50% discount in selected countries like Nepal and Mexico. It grants users access to Gemini 2.5 Pro, a multimodal AI capable of generating images and videos, alongside integrated productivity features in Gmail, Docs, and Sheets. 

Subscribers also get 200GB of cloud storage and enhanced capabilities within Google’s AI research assistant, NotebookLM, which now supports long-context document analysis, a feature particularly useful for students, researchers, and journalists.

Tools like Flow, Whisk, and Veo 3 Fast are also included. They allow fast creation of animations, visual content, and video assets, directly appealing to the creator economy in regions where mobile-first usage dominates.

The launch comes a day after OpenAI expanded its ChatGPT Go plan to Indonesia, a sub-$5 subscription tier that grants access to GPT-4-turbo but lacks the integrated productivity tools and cloud storage of Google’s Plus tier. 

Analysts see these pricing strategies as a transition from competing on raw AI model power to offering complete ecosystems that integrate seamlessly into daily workflows.

Usage of AI tools in Africa has surged by 240% since 2023, with Nigeria, Kenya, and Egypt leading growth, according to Statista and GSMA. Southeast Asia is witnessing similar trends, particularly in Indonesia and Vietnam, where freelancers and small businesses increasingly adopt AI-powered productivity tools.

India, despite being a top AI market where OpenAI debuted ChatGPT Go, is missing from Google’s rollout. Experts say this may relate to ongoing adjustments in pricing and compliance strategies to address data localisation and regulatory challenges.

Google is making AI affordable without sacrificing utility, especially in emerging markets where a $20 subscription is usually prohibitive. For users in Nigeria and similar economies, the new Google AI Plus plan could be a game-changer.



Source: Techeconomy

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