
Kenya’s podcasting scene isn’t just growing – it’s exploding. Over the last two years, podcasts have transformed from niche projects into a dominant force in Kenya’s media landscape, influencing what people watch, how they engage, and even how they vote.
A new research report from Odipo Dev, titled “The Podcasters Are Coming”, offers the most comprehensive look yet at this shift. The report analyzes performance data from Kenya’s top 50 podcasts on YouTube and TikTok, and compares their audience engagement to that of mainstream media. The takeaway is clear: podcasting is no longer an alternative – it’s the main event.
At Techish, we’ve tracked this shift closely. As one of the platforms behind the 24Bit Podcast, we’ve witnessed firsthand how podcasts build deep, loyal audiences through long-form, personality-driven content. And in our own reporting on Spotify’s 2024 trends, we saw that Kenyans streamed over 483 million minutes of podcast content, driven by humor, relationships, and ensemble-style shows like Mic Cheque, The Sandwich Podcast, and So This Is Love.
Odipo Dev’s report goes further, showing that creators like Abel Mutua racked up nearly 30 million YouTube views from fewer than 100 uploads, far outperforming traditional broadcasters like Nation Media, which uploaded thousands of videos in the same period but drew less engagement. And on TikTok, podcast clips are pulling in even more views, proving that short-form virality is feeding long-form loyalty.
The audiences aren’t just big – they’re highly engaged. The report finds that most podcast fans in Kenya are young and male, with the 25–34 age group dominating listenership. They don’t just scroll past. They comment, share, attend live shows, and treat their favorite podcasters like trusted friends.
That loyalty has made podcasting a magnet for advertisers, political strategists, and donors. According to Odipo Dev, podcasters outperform legacy media up to 14x in engagement per upload. Brands are taking notice, investing in shows that feel more intimate, authentic, and influential than traditional TV or radio.
And now, even the legacy players are adapting. Broadcasters like Spice FM, NTV, and Radio Jambo are adjusting their sets, formats, and distribution models to match the podcasting aesthetic – informal, conversational, and deeply personal.
But as we head into the 2027 elections, the stakes are growing. Odipo Dev warns that Kenya’s top podcasters are no longer just entertainers. They’re emerging as political kingmakers, with the ability to shape opinion and set agendas. That power brings new responsibility – to remain credible, accurate, and accountable in an increasingly polarized media environment.
This article is based on insights from “The Podcasters Are Coming,” an original research piece by Odipo Dev, published April 2025.
Discover more from Techish Kenya
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.