Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Mercosur Ends Roaming Fees, But Six-Year Delay Exposes Deeper Fault Lines


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's Senate ratified on August 20, 2025, Mercosur's 2019 agreement to end roaming charges among its four member states.

The measure will take effect ninety days after official promulgation, closing a process that took six years and exposing how slowly the bloc moves on basic integration.

The agreement signed in Santa Fe in 2019 obliges mobile operators to apply home-country rates to travelers, ensure price transparency, and provide service quality equal to that offered locally.

It also sets up mechanisms for disputes between operators. National regulators in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay must enforce these rules.

Uruguay ratified first in 2020, followed by Paraguay in 2023. That bilateral pair brought the deal into force in February 2024. Argentina approved in May 2024 but postponed rollout, citing the need for coordination and Brazil's delay.



Brazil only completed Senate approval in August 2025. This lag meant that while some countries advanced, the full bloc could not apply the benefits.

For consumers, the change is straightforward: calls, data, and messages in another Mercosur country will cost the same as at home. Border residents, often hit by accidental roaming charges, stand to gain most.

Businesses operating regionally will also face fewer communication costs, improving predictability. The European Union ended roaming in 2017, creating a single telecom market. Mercosur copied the model, but the timeline tells another story.

It took the EU roughly a decade to negotiate and launch its system. Mercosur took six years just to complete ratification, and real implementation still depends on coordination among carriers and regulators.

This delay is not just technical. It highlights the bloc's chronic weakness: agreements often come with big announcements but suffer in execution.

Even small, practical steps such as eliminating roaming charges reveal the difficulty of aligning national agendas inside Mercosur . The roaming deal will eventually make travel cheaper and easier for millions of citizens and cut costs for cross-border trade.

Yet the drawn-out process shows how fragile regional integration remains. The policy's importance lies not only in cheaper phone bills, but also in the way it exposes Mercosur's slow and uneven path to delivering concrete results.

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