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freitasm

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#324242 16-Mar-2026 09:43
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The Commerce Commission has recommended ending regulation of mobile termination services, saying competition in New Zealand's mobile market is now strong enough for those rules to be removed.

 

The Mobile Termination Access Service (MTAS), which enables voice calls and text messages to be sent between different networks, played a key role in enabling 2degrees to grow as the country’s third nationwide mobile network operator.

 

“Good regulation needs to know when to step in – but also when to step back,” says Telecommunications Commissioner Tristan Gilbertson.

 

“The rules introduced in 2010 helped create a level playing field that allowed 2degrees to grow into a strong third mobile network. With competition now well established between three national providers, regulation has done its job and can step back.”

 

Regulation was introduced to address competition concerns in a market that was at the time dominated by two large networks – Telecom and Vodafone. High termination rates at the wholesale level and strong on-net pricing incentives at the retail level created a structural disadvantage for a new entrant like 2degrees.

 

Larger networks could offer cheaper prices for calls and texts within their own network, encouraging customers to stay with the biggest providers. At the same time, high termination charges meant that when 2degrees customers called those networks, 2degrees had to pay more to complete the call. Regulation reduced those termination charges and helped level the playing field between networks.

 

Fifteen years on, 2degrees has grown into a strong nationwide competitor and New Zealand now has three established mobile networks competing vigorously for customers.

 

“Our view is that regulation has successfully done the job it was intended to do,” Mr Gilbertson says.

 

The Commission’s recommendation has been provided to the Minister for Media and Communications, who will decide whether to amend the Telecommunications Act to remove MTAS from the Telecommunications Act.

 

The Commission’s final recommendation report and letter to the Minister is available on its website.

 

Background

 

The market pre-2010

 

MTAS are wholesale services supplied by one mobile network operator (MNO) to another that allow customers on different networks to communicate by voice call or SMS.

 

Before MTAS was regulated, calls and texts were often much cheaper within the same network than between different networks. This encouraged customers to join the largest networks, so they could communicate more cheaply with friends and family, making it difficult for a new operator to attract customers.

 

In June 2010, the Commission recommended to the Minister of Communications that MTAS be regulated with set prices to even the playing field, resulting in the introduction of regulation later that year.

 

The current market

 

Since then, market conditions have changed significantly and competition no longer centres on voice calls and text messaging in the way it once did.

 

Consumers increasingly choose mobile plans based on data allowances, speeds and coverage, while voice calls and SMS are typically bundled into plans, often with unlimited allowances. Many people also use internet-based messaging and calling services, such as WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger, alongside traditional communications.

 

These developments mean wholesale mobile termination charges are no longer likely to influence how mobile providers compete for customers.

 

The Commission also found that traffic between the three mobile networks is now broadly balanced, reducing the incentive for discriminatory treatment between networks that originally raised competition concerns.

 

Overall, the Commission found that mobile networks have limited incentive or ability to increase termination charges in a way that would harm competition or lead to higher prices for consumers.

 

The Commission’s review of MTAS was conducted under Schedule 3 of the Telecommunications Act, which requires periodic review of regulated services to ensure regulation remains necessary.

 

The last review was completed in October 2020.

 





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boosacnoodle
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  #3470753 16-Mar-2026 10:08
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Privacy Commission?




freitasm

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  #3470756 16-Mar-2026 10:10
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Oops, sorry. Fixed the title.

 

It shows no AI involved here.





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BlakJak
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  #3471577 18-Mar-2026 21:46
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I wonder about this. Maybe i'm jaded, but when the market is left to do its own thing, the main thing they agree on is the need to profit first....





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Linux
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  #3471578 18-Mar-2026 21:54
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One of the 3 will raise termination rates and the others will follow and so we head back to early 2000


boosacnoodle
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  #3471579 18-Mar-2026 21:56
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If it's working, why get rid of it?


yitz
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  #3471584 18-Mar-2026 22:10
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Gives new entrant the opportunity to do another Text Me Race 😁


 
 
 

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cisconz
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  #3471601 19-Mar-2026 07:41
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BlakJak:

 

I wonder about this. Maybe i'm jaded, but when the market is left to do its own thing, the main thing they agree on is the need to profit first....

 

 

Linux:

 

One of the 3 will raise termination rates and the others will follow and so we head back to early 2000

 

 

We already know what it will go to - currently 4c Fixed to Mobile.

 

However Unregulated 0800 is 7.5c ish, so rates will almost double. 





Hmmmm


cisconz
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  #3471602 19-Mar-2026 07:43
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yitz:

 

Gives new entrant the opportunity to do another Text Me Race 😁

 

 

Only if they build a mobile network....

 

For anyone doing Fixed line only, the can only pay the costs - they can't charge them. 





Hmmmm


richms
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  #3471603 19-Mar-2026 07:45
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Its for calling, something a lot less relevant than it was back when this was new and noone used data on their phone for everything. All the carriers are bundling unlimited calls and SMS with almost any data plan because people just do not use it like they once did.

 

I cant see them putting it up to the point that it affects unlimited calling plans so really whats the worst they can do?





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  #3471605 19-Mar-2026 07:53
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I know it's not the same, but I'm thinking of roaming from the UK. At first, by law, there were preferential rates to EU countries (might've been same price as in the UK, not sure). When Brexit happened, the phone companies all promised that they'd keep the same deals. Eventually one blinked and put its prices up, then the rest were quick to follow.

 

But as richms says, if it's just for calling then my personal opinion is a big "meh". I'd use less than 5 minutes in a typical month, and I can't imagine that an unlimited SMS package would jump sky-high at this point.


wellygary
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  #3471614 19-Mar-2026 09:10
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Basically the Com Com have concluded that we don't need more than three networks (MVNOs withstanding) 

 

Regulating termination rates allows for new entrants (most of their calls by default are into the other networks, )

 

2 Degrees has enough heft that its likely the big 3 can balance the costs and keep the customer cost at 0, But for any new player its still a barrier.

 

Although the number of terminated minutes must be falling fast as OTT services like whatsapp etc have pretty much taken all the cream off international voice calls


 
 
 

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  #3471643 19-Mar-2026 11:00
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Agree no need for it. If they do raise prices, these days the more likely outcome is people will pivot to data-based calling services. The telcos know this so they already have a natural intentive not to raise prices too much.


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