Home / Channel / General Tech / EU scraps 90-day limit on free data roaming

EU scraps 90-day limit on free data roaming

The European Commission is currently in the process of eliminating roaming charges for mobile customers travelling within the EU, which is great news. However, the Commission is also toying around with some safeguard ideas to ensure the new system isn't abused. Earlier this month, a draft proposal called for a 90-day time limit on consumers before being charged extra for using their phones abroad. This was called out by consumer rights groups and has now been scrapped.

That means when roaming charges are outlawed within the European Union next year, you won't have to worry about time limits and just use your device as normal. However, mobile operators will be able to check up on ‘irregular usage'.

european-mobile-roaming-charges

As the EU's digital commissioner puts it (via euronews), if someone has a place of residence in Germany or France, but uses a SIM card from an operator in Estonia for an entire year to take advantage of lower prices, then the operator will be able to check up on that and charge you more in the future.

This is the latest safeguard idea floating around, though it still needs to be approved by the EU before going anywhere.

KitGuru Says: Many consumers were happy to hear that roaming charges will no longer apply within Europe. However, it does make sense for something to be in place to stop abuse of the system.

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Computex 2025: Montech’s most ambitious line-up yet

Montech has released some very interesting cases in recent years. This week at Computex, Leo stopped by their booth to get a look at all the latest in PC cases, as well as some new coolers and peripherals.

One comment

  1. Søren Chr. Nielsen

    Just the whole notion of you “cheating” by buying a sim card from a different country within the union is completely missing the idea of the shared inner market. The whole purpose is exactly that of trading without having to worry about borders, but I guess the phone carriers will protest any change that will hurt their profits. I understand it, but I don’t condone them getting some sort of preferential treatment just because someone hurt their feelings. 😛

We've noticed that you are using an ad blocker.

Thank you for visiting KitGuru. Our news and reviews teams work hard to bring you the latest stories and finest, in-depth analysis.

We want to be as informative as possible – and to help our readers make the best buying decisions. The mechanism we use to run our business and pay some of the best journalists in the world, is advertising.

If you want to support KitGuru, then please add www.kitguru.net to your ad blocking whitelist or disable your adblocking software. It really makes a difference and allows us to continue creating the kind of content you really want to read.

It is important you know that we don’t run pop ups, pop unders, audio ads, code tracking ads or anything else that would interfere with the KitGuru experience. Adblockers can actually block some of our free content, such as galleries!