The continent’s entertainment landscape is preparing for its annual moment in the spotlight as the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) launches its 12th edition, signaling another chapter in what has become Africa’s most anticipated celebration of film and television excellence.
The official call for entries, which opened Sunday, January 11, 2026, marks the beginning of a rigorous selection process that will culminate in a glittering ceremony scheduled for Lagos this May. For the next month, filmmakers, producers, and content creators from across Africa’s 54 nations have until February 15 to submit their work via the official AMVCA portal, hoping to secure recognition on the continent’s most coveted awards platform.
What distinguishes this year’s edition from its predecessors is a deliberate expansion of scope and vision. The AMVCA 2026 has expanded its competitive landscape to 32 award categories—comprising 18 jury-decided categories and 11 audience-voted categories—representing the most comprehensive recognition framework in the awards’ history.
The most significant development, however, lies in the awards’ geographical reach. In a move that underscores the AMVCA’s pan-African ambitions, organizers have introduced two new Indigenous Language categories: Best Indigenous Language – North Africa and Best Indigenous Language – Central Africa. These additions join existing indigenous language categories, creating a more complete picture of African storytelling that transcends the continent’s colonial linguistic borders.
“This expansion isn’t merely administrative,” explained industry observers who have tracked the AMVCA’s evolution since its inception. “It’s a philosophical statement about whose stories matter and which voices deserve amplification.”
The awards continue to operate through the partnership between Africa Magic and MultiChoice, now a Canal+ company, a collaboration that has provided the institutional backbone for the AMVCA’s growth over the past decade. This year’s edition sees Don Julio stepping in as lead sponsor, a partnership that organizers say reflects the awards’ commitment to promoting what they term “African excellence, creativity, and craftsmanship.”
According to a press release made available to THISDAY on Thursday, the organizers have emphasized that technical requirements remain stringent: submissions must include full preview copies uploaded exactly as screened or broadcast, maintaining the integrity of the judging process while ensuring accessibility for both jury members and, where applicable, the voting public.
The AMVCA’s expansion of indigenous language categories represents more than token recognition—it’s a deliberate strategy of cultural preservation in an era of homogenizing global entertainment. From the Arabic-language productions of North Africa to the French-influenced cinema of Central Africa, from West Africa’s Yoruba, Hausa, and Igbo storytelling traditions to the Swahili narratives of East Africa, the awards are positioning themselves as custodians of linguistic and cultural diversity.
“Every African story matters, and every voice deserves to be heard,” the organizers stated, a sentiment that reflects growing continental consciousness about the importance of cultural representation in an increasingly globalized media landscape.
The timing of this year’s AMVCA is particularly significant. African entertainment is experiencing unprecedented global attention, with streaming platforms investing heavily in African content and African creators gaining international recognition at festivals from Cannes to Toronto. The AMVCA serves as both a barometer and an accelerator of this growth, providing a continental platform that validates African excellence by African standards.
The competitive nature of this year’s edition is expected to reflect this maturation. With production values rising across the continent and investment flowing into African content creation, the quality of submissions is anticipated to reach new heights, making the judges’ task more challenging than ever.
As the February 15 deadline approaches, production houses, independent filmmakers, and television networks across Africa are preparing their submissions, each hoping to secure a spot in the May ceremony—and with it, recognition as among the finest storytellers on a continent whose creative renaissance is only beginning.
For an industry long overlooked on the global stage, the AMVCA represents more than an awards ceremony. It’s an annual affirmation that African stories, told by African voices, in African languages, deserve celebration on their own terms.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The 12th Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards opens for submissions until February 15, 2026, with the ceremony set for Lagos in May.
This year’s edition expands to 32 categories and introduces Indigenous Language awards for North and Central Africa—a landmark move that signals the AMVCA’s commitment to celebrating African stories in African languages, not just English or French. It’s a clear statement that linguistic diversity matters and every corner of the continent deserves representation on Africa’s premier entertainment stage.
























