Internet in Chile

The technical regulator for the Internet in Chile is the Ministry of Transportation and Telecommunications, through the Undersecretariat of Telecommunications (Subtel).

The Internet country code is .cl.[1]

Internet access

In 2011 there were 1.854 million Internet hosts in Chile.[1] According to the International Telecommunication Union, 45% of the population in Chile had access to the Internet in 2010.[2] The household penetration rate for fixed Internet connections stands at 39.01%, with 1,991,277 subscribers as of September 2011.[3]

Internet usage

According to a national survey[3] on telecommunication services consumption, published by Subtel in January 2009, 40.6% of Chileans use the Internet, while 59.1% do not.

Places where Chileans get online
Place% (*)
Home45.6
Work39.0
Cybercafé29.0
Friends/relatives' house18.4
University12.8
School8.9
Did not use2.6
Others1.6

Note: Multiple responses are allowed. (*) Out of those who use the Internet.

Visits to a cybercafé during last week
Frequency% (*)
Once41.7
2-5 times39.3
6-10 times7.9
More than 10 times4.6
Don't know/No response6.6

(*) Out of those who've visited a cybercafé in the last week.

Connection speeds

SpeedConnections
(September 2011)[4]
%
≤56 kbit/s1,3200.1%
56 kbit/s-128 kbit/s1,8030.1%
128 kbit/s-256 kbit/s11,2500.6%
256 kbit/s-512 kbit/s39,7902.0%
512 kbit/s-1 Mbit/s119,0356.0%
1 Mbit/s-2 Mbit/s569,31728.6%
2 Mbit/s-5 Mbit/s318,72016.0%
5 Mbit/s-10 Mbit/s669,60033.6%
10 Mbit/s-100 Mbit/s244,51112.3%
100 Mbit/s-1 Gbit/s15,2070.8%
>1 Gbit/s250.0%
Total fixed connections1,990,578100.0%

Broadband market

Market share

CompanyConnections[3]Market share
(September 2011)
Telefónica834,77841.9%
VTR Banda Ancha758,31338.1%
Claro Comunicaciones S.A.177,9528.9%
Telsur102,1805.1%
GTD Manquehue39,3662.0%
Entel-Chile S.A.20,6011.0%
Pacífico Cable15,1610.8%
CMET14,5350.7%
CTR7,4640.4%
Telcoy7,4250.4%
Telmex4,5470.2%
GTD Internet4,1880.2%
BitRed1,2580.2%
RTC9710.0%
Luzlinares6400.0%
Luzparral5500.0%
Netglobalis5370.0%
Fullcom5050.0%
AT&T Chile S.A.5020.0%
Inalámbrica S.A.3290.0%
Netline3100.0%
Firstcom1580.0%
Claro Holding S.A.1090.0%
Will S.A.990.0%
E-Money380.0%
Chilesat100.0%
Chile.com60.0%
Infonet20.0%
Telmex Chile Networks10.0%
Total connections1,991,277100.0%

Plans

Companies offering home use broadband connections include:

VTR

VTR, Chile's largest cable company, offers several "always on" plans[5] through cable modem (as of June 2020):

  • Flat-rate HFC plans:
    • 200 Mbit/s (downstream)/7 Mbit/s (upstream), US$26/month (unlimited)
    • 500/10 Mbit/s, US$32/month (unlimited)
    • 600/16 Mbit/s, US$43/month (unlimited)

Note: Exchange rate used: 1 US dollar = 821.14 Chilean pesos (May 2020 average)

Movistar Chile

Movistar Chile, Chile's biggest phone company, offers several FTTH plans[6] (as of June 1, 2020):

  • Flat-rate FTTH plans:
    • 200/100 Mbit/s, US$25.56
    • 500/250 Mbit/s, US$31.65
    • 900/450 Mbit/s, US$45.04

Note: Exchange rate used: 1 US dollar = 821.14 Chilean pesos (May 2020 average)

Entel

Entel, another major telecommunications company, offers several plans[7] through FTTH and LTE:

  • Flat-rate FTTH plans:
    • 250/30 Mbit/s, US$26.77
    • 500/50 Mbit/s, US$32.86
    • 940/400 Mbit/s, US$46.26
  • Wireless LTE-based connections:
    • 10/4 Mbit/s, US$18.25
    • 30/5 Mbit/s, US$24.34

Note: Exchange rate used: 1 US dollar = 821.14 Chilean pesos (May 2020 average)

Gtd Manquehue

Gtd Manquehue offers (through FTTH):

  • Flat-rate plans:
    • 200/100 Mbit/s, US$34.08
    • 200/200 Mbit/s, US$35.29
    • 400/100 Mbit/s, US$36.51
    • 400/200 Mbit/s, US$37.71

Note: Exchange rate used: 1 US dollar = 821.14 Chilean pesos (May 2020 average)

Network neutrality

On 13 June 2010, the National Congress of Chile, amended its telecommunications law in order to preserve network neutrality, becoming the first country in the world to do so.[8][9][10] The law, published on 26 August 2010, added three articles to the General Law of Telecommunications, forbidding ISPs from arbitrarily blocking, interfering with, discriminating, hindering or restricting an Internet user's right to use, send, receive or offer any legal content, application, service or any other type of legal activity or use through the Internet. ISPs must offer Internet access in which content is not arbitrarily treated differently based on its source or ownership.[11]

References

  1. "Chile". CIA The World Factbook. Retrieved 2011-12-26.
  2. Definitions of World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators, March 2010 Archived 2014-12-20 at the Wayback Machine, International Telecommunication Union, March 2010. Accessed on 30 September 2011.
  3. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-11. Retrieved 2009-01-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Internet hogar: planes de banda ancha con Nextgen Wifi". VTR (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  5. "Contrata Internet Hogar Fibra Óptica | Planes Hogar | Movistar". ww2.movistar.cl. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  6. "Planes de Hogar Internet, Telefonía y Televisión | Entel". entel.cl. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  7. "Net neutrality enshrined in Dutch law". The Guardian. London. Associated Press. 23 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  8. "Chile publica su ley que garantiza la neutralidad de la Red | Navegante". El Mundo. Spain. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  9. "¿Quién quiere acabar con la neutralidad en la Red?". EL PAÍS. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  10. "Law 20,453". Retrieved 14 September 2014.
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