Mobile phone users travelling across parts of Southern Africa are expected to see significantly lower roaming charges following a regional agreement aimed at improving digital connectivity and facilitating cross border communication.
Telecommunications regulators from Botswana, Malawi, Lesotho, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe have agreed to reduce roaming tariffs for voice calls, text messages and mobile data under the One Network Area framework, an initiative designed to harmonise telecommunications services across borders. According to the Botswana Communications Regulatory Authority, reductions range from approximately 10 per cent to as much as 98.6 per cent depending on the type of service used.
The agreement forms part of a broader regional effort to strengthen digital integration within the Southern African Development Community. By reducing the cost of mobile communication when users move between neighbouring states, policymakers and regulators aim to support cross border trade, tourism and the growing use of digital services.
Under the arrangement, telecom operators in the participating countries have adjusted pricing structures so that customers travelling within the region face significantly lower charges when using voice, SMS and mobile data services. Receiving SMS messages across the participating countries will be free of charge, while roaming data rates on certain routes have been reduced sharply. For example, regulators indicate that data roaming costs between Botswana and Zambia have declined by as much as 94 per cent.
The initiative brings together both national and regional telecommunications operators. Companies participating in the programme include Orange Botswana, Mascom Wireless and Botswana Telecommunications Corporation as well as multinational operators active across African markets such as MTN Group, Vodacom Group, Airtel Africa and Econet Wireless.
Regulators say the latest agreement builds on earlier bilateral arrangements within the region. Botswana and Namibia, for instance, introduced harmonised roaming tariffs in 2024, an initiative that was viewed by policymakers as an initial step towards a wider regional framework.
Mobile connectivity remains a central pillar of digital access across much of Africa, where mobile networks are often the primary gateway to the internet for households and businesses. Research examining telecommunications markets in the Southern African Development Community has long highlighted the economic significance of reducing international mobile roaming charges, noting that high tariffs can discourage cross border communication and limit the growth of regional digital economies.
Studies examining telecommunications regulation in the region indicate that harmonising roaming tariffs can encourage market competition and stimulate digital commerce while also supporting the free movement of people and services within regional blocs. Analysts have similarly pointed to earlier initiatives in East Africa, where the One Network Area programme implemented by the East African Community contributed to lower communication costs and increased cross border connectivity.
Officials within the Southern African regulatory community have indicated that the current agreement may expand over time to include additional member states as governments seek to strengthen regional digital infrastructure and support the development of a more integrated African communications market.
While the scale of the price reductions varies across services and operators, policymakers suggest that the initiative reflects a broader shift towards collaborative regulation in African telecommunications. Rather than treating national networks as isolated systems, regional frameworks increasingly emphasise interoperability, affordability and digital inclusion across borders.
For travellers, traders and businesses operating across Southern Africa, the agreement is expected to reduce one of the longstanding costs associated with regional mobility. Regulators say the initiative also reflects growing recognition that digital connectivity plays a central role in enabling economic participation across the continent.







