EU abolishes mobile roaming charges
Briefing
14-06-2017
Almost all EU residents own a mobile phone for their personal or professional use. When they travel to another EU country and use it to call, text or go online, they used to have to pay additional costs (roaming charges). This situation, which made travel within the EU more complicated and expensive for consumers and businesses, has come to an end: the latest EU Roaming Regulation abolished the extra costs on 15 June 2017. Since then, 'roam like at home' (RLAH) has become a reality for all Europeans. The new roaming-free zone covers not only the EU, but the whole of the European Economic Area (EEA), which includes the EU and three European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries: Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.
Briefing
About this document
Publication type
Policy area
Keyword
- communications
- consumer price
- consumer protection
- consumption
- cross-frontier data flow
- data transmission
- digital single market
- EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
- European construction
- EUROPEAN UNION
- FINANCE
- Internet
- mobile communication
- mobile phone
- prices
- regulation of telecommunications
- roaming
- single market
- telephone charges
- TRADE
- transmission network
- universal service