The Independent

Will I face roaming charges abroad after 29 March?

- ANDREW GRIFFIN TECHNOLOGY EDITOR

Roaming charges have, until recently, been one of the most punishing things about going on holiday. And they soon could be again.

Brexit has brought back fears that companies could re-introduce roaming fees and force people to pay extortiona­te amounts as they travel around Europe. Those charges disappeare­d because of EU rules – and could come back when the UK leaves as a result.

If the UK leaves under Theresa May‘s deal, nothing much will change. It includes stipulatio­ns that the

rules and regulation­s on roaming charges – just like other areas – will stay in place until the end of the transition period.

During that period, the EU and the UK would decide how those regulation­s will be implemente­d. But if the UK doesn’t leave under May’s deal, or any other deal, everything gets a little more complicate­d. And it is worth delving into the history of how we got here.

Before the change, there were few limits on what carriers could charge to people who went abroad. That regularly meant phone bills so expensive that they were catalogued in news stories, documentin­g the pain of people accidental­ly charged thousands of pounds for phones and texts – and, less spectacula­rly, tourists that often avoided using their phone abroad entirely.

But regulation­s arrived in June 2017 that scrapped roaming charges across the continent. To ensure that people had the same service wherever they were, phone companies had to allow their customers to travel and use other networks as if they were in their home country.

Since then, holidaying Britons have largely avoided charges. Not only are you unlikely to be hit by huge costs, moving across the continent is largely seamless, with phones flicking on to different countries’ networks as you arrive in them with no real input.

If the UK leaves with no deal, that situation will revert, and there will be no restrictio­ns on what carriers want to charge their customers when they go abroad. Roaming charges will be back, in some form or another.

The government has said that in the event of a no-deal Brexit, it will bring in some restrictio­ns: a £45-permonth limit on how much people can spend while abroad, and the requiremen­t that users are notified as they hit 80 per cent and 100 per cent of their data allowances.

Still, the charges will be introduced only if the networks decide to. For now, all of the networks that have commented have said some variation on having “no plans” to introduce extra fees – though of course they may opt to introduce them all the same.

Some networks have already shown allowed these kinds of services in places outside of the EU. Three, for instance, has a programme called Feel At Home, which allows people to use their data allowances in a dozens of countries including the US, many of which are not in the EU.

Got an unanswered question about Brexit? Send it to editor@independen­t.co.uk and we’ll do our best to supply an answer in our Brexit Explained series

 ?? (AP) ?? Roaming charges were removed under EU regulation­s
(AP) Roaming charges were removed under EU regulation­s

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