The Short Answer
Most DStv error codes fall into two buckets: authorisationproblems (your decoder isn't cleared to view — E16) and signal problems (nothing is reaching the box — E48-32, E30, rain fade, pixelation). Authorisation errors are fixed from your account; signal errors are fixed at the dish, cable, or LNB. Almost none of them require a technician on the first attempt. This guide explains each code and how to clear it. For the wider platform picture, see the complete DStv guide.
The Two Kinds of DStv Fault
Before the individual codes, understand the split — it tells you where to look. An authorisation faultmeans the signal is arriving fine but your smartcard isn't entitled to unscramble the channel. That is a billing or reset issue, and you solve it from DStv self-service without touching any hardware.
A signal faultmeans the satellite feed itself isn't reaching the decoder properly — a dish, cable, LNB or weather problem. No amount of paying or resetting will fix a signal fault; you fix it physically. Knowing which bucket you're in saves an hour of chasing the wrong solution.
E16 — Not Authorised
E16 is the most common code and it is nota broken box. It means the decoder is not authorised to view that channel — almost always because the subscription has lapsed, a payment hasn't cleared yet, or the smartcard simply needs re-authorising. The frustrating part is that paying alone often isn't enough: the box can keep showing E16 until you explicitly send it a reset.
How to fix E16
1. Confirm your subscription is paid and up to date — settle any outstanding balance first.
2. Send a reset (a "clear error" or re-authorise request) from DStv self-service, the MyDStv app, WhatsApp, or the USSD short-code.
3. Leave the decoder switched on and tuned to the affected channel for a few minutes so it can receive and apply the new entitlement.
That reset step is the single most-missed fix in all of DStv, so we cover exactly how to send one — and how to pay if the balance is the cause — in our DStv self-service guide.
E48-32 — Searching for Signal
E48-32 means the decoder can't find the satellite signal. Unlike E16, this is a physical problem, so paying or resetting won't touch it. The usual culprits, in order of likelihood: a dish knocked out of alignment (wind, a ladder, a bird), a loose or water-damaged cable, corroded connectors, or a failing LNB — and, temporarily, heavy weather.
How to fix E48-32
1. Rule out weather — if a storm is overhead, wait for it to pass and see if the signal returns.
2. Check the coaxial cable at both ends: firm connection at the LNB on the dish arm and at the decoder's LNB IN socket, with no visible corrosion or water damage.
3. Check signal strength and quality in the decoder's settings/installation menu. Persistent low readings in clear weather mean the dish needs re-pointing by an accredited installer.
E30 — No or Scrambled Signal
E30 is a close cousin of E48-32: it flags no signal or a scrambled one reaching the decoder. The root causes overlap almost entirely — cabling faults, loose or corroded connectors, and a failing or misaligned LNB are the prime suspects. Treat it as a signal-strength investigation.
How to fix E30
1. Inspect the full cable run from dish to decoder for kinks, splits, or water ingress at the connectors.
2. Re-seat the cable at the LNB and at the decoder to rule out a loose connection.
3. If signal strength stays low after that, the LNB or dish alignment is the likely fault and needs a professional to re-point or replace.
Rain Fade, Freezing & Pixelation
Two more issues plague satellite viewers, and both are signal-quality symptoms rather than error codes.
No signal in heavy rain (rain fade)
Thick cloud and storms weaken the satellite signal — this is normal physics on any satellite dish and usually restores itself the moment the weather clears. If your picture drops in only light rain or does so frequently, the dish alignment is marginal and has little headroom; a re-point gives it more tolerance for bad weather.
Frozen or pixelating picture
Blocky, stuttering, or freezing video is almost always weak signal or a decoder that needs a reboot. Power-cycle the box (switch off at the wall for 30 seconds, then on). If it continues, check signal strength in the settings menu — a low reading points back to a cable, connector, or dish issue.
Why Satellite Faults Look Different From Streaming Faults
There's a pattern worth naming. Almost every DStv fault above is a hardware or weather problem — the dish, the cable, the LNB, the sky. You fix them with a screwdriver, a re-point, or a wait for the storm to pass. Internet-delivered TV never has these problems, because there is no dish to knock loose and no weather in the equation.
What internet TV trades them for is bandwidthproblems — buffering, stalls, and quality drops that come from your connection rather than your roof. The fix list is completely different, and it's the reason a streaming troubleshooting guide reads nothing like this one. If you ever move to internet TV — or use DStv Stream — our guide to fixing streaming buffering fast is the equivalent triage. For the full DStv-versus-internet picture, and every other DStv fix in one place, return to our full DStv 2026 guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does DStv error E16 mean and how do I fix it?
E16 means the decoder isn't authorised for that channel — usually a lapsed subscription or uncleared payment. Pay any balance, then send a reset from DStv self-service or the MyDStv app to re-authorise the smartcard, and leave the box on the affected channel for a few minutes.
What is DStv error E48-32?
It means the decoder is searching for signal — almost always a dish out of alignment, a loose or water-damaged cable, a faulty LNB, or heavy weather. Check the cable connections; if it persists in clear weather, the dish needs re-pointing.
What causes DStv error E30?
E30 indicates no signal or a scrambled one, a signal-strength issue like E48-32. It's usually a cabling fault, loose connector, or failing LNB. Inspect the cable run and connectors first; if signal stays low, the LNB or alignment needs attention.
Why does DStv stop working when it rains?
Heavy rain and cloud weaken the satellite signal (rain fade). It's normal and usually clears itself once the weather passes. Dropouts in light rain or frequent ones point to marginal dish alignment that a re-point can fix.
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