South Korea’s telecom giants surprise 7 million users with unlimited, universal internet — net access declared a 'basic telecommunications right,' 400 Kbps data after monthly plans run out
The scheme follows a string of security failures at SK Telecom, KT, and LG Uplus.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
South Korea's Ministry of Science and ICT said on Thursday that SK Telecom, KT, and LG Uplus — the country’s three major carriers — will provide more than seven million mobile subscribers with unmetered 400 Kbps data once their monthly allowances run out. First floated as part of a broader package of consumer-protection measures being assembled in parallel with its response to spiking memory and PC component prices, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Science and ICT Bae Kyung-hoon announced the program as one of many new obligations imposed on the three carriers in response to a sequence of security failures over the past year, calling unlimited, universal access one of the “basic telecommunications rights” that operators are expected to fund themselves.
400 Kbps might not sound like much, especially given that 5G can reach peak speeds in excess of 1 Gbps and standard-definition video streaming requires speeds of around 5 Mbps as a baseline, but it’s more than enough for very rudimentary activities like messaging and VoIP audio, or two-factor authentication.
It’s worth noting that the fallback to 400 Kbps only applies once a customer burns through their paid monthly cap, replacing the hard cutoff or overage charges that previously kicked in on affected plans.
Article continues belowAlongside the obligation to provide unmetered 400 Kbps access, the three operators have committed to increasing data and calling allowances for seniors, upgrading Wi-Fi services on public transport, and introducing 5G plans priced at $13.50 or below. Bae also pushed the carriers to direct more capital toward network buildout for AI workloads.
"Having gone through last year's hacking incidents, the weight of the telecom companies' responsibilities and roles has become even clearer," Bae said in a press release, emphasizing, “We have now reached a point where we must move beyond pledges not to repeat past mistakes and respond with renewal and contribution at a level of complete transformation that the public can tangibly feel." He went on to say that it’s important for the government to contribute to people’s livelihoods, including by guaranteeing what he called “basic telecommunications rights” for all citizens.
Each of the three network operators has been hit by a significant security incident in recent months. SK Telecom suffered a large-scale subscriber data leak, whereas KT was found to have deliberately pushed malware to roughly 600,000 of its own subscribers who were using a third-party BitTorrent-based file-sharing service, resulting in missing files and disabled PCs.
Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist. Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory.
-
Mindstab Thrull Wow. A country telling the providers of a key utility "you're a basic need these days, you can't cut people off just because they got a cap"... Kudos to South Korea. One can only hope this train of thought filters eventually to the West. Fingers crossed it's within the next decade!Reply -
PEnns ReplyMindstab Thrull said:Wow. A country telling the providers of a key utility "you're a basic need these days, you can't cut people off just because they got a cap"... Kudos to South Korea. One can only hope this train of thought filters eventually to the West. Fingers crossed it's within the next decade!
Indeed! I have seen so may companies here in the US with expensive "unlimited everything" plans bury the throttling and capping in the ever present 2-3 pages of extra fine print. -
Roland Of Gilead When it comes to a lot of things tech, I always believe the US and other countries, like SK get the best deals and services.Reply
The one exception, IMO, are broadband and mobile (cell) packages. We rolled out a National Broadband Initiative a few years back, mandating the Government to ensure that every single household can avail of high speed broadband, and this includes rural areas. This is a typical minimum level service of 50/mb down/20mb up. However, the majority of the country is covered by 100mb down/20mb up. We also have very cheap prices. For a 100mb down 50mb up service you might pay €£$15-20 for an unlimited package. My own package is 1gb broadband for £$€30 per month.
Same with mobile. We get lifelong plans for 5G with unlimited data from €£$9.99 per month, varying slightly above that depending on which provider you have.
We've also made switching from one supplier to another as easy as just having a phone call, or an online order. The transition is seamless.
The point I'm making I guess, is that our governments can do something about this. That South Korea are doing this is a good start.
I do also appreciate that in the US, individual states have their own regulations, and as such service providers often charge a lot for these services. -
Pierce2623 Reply
As far as I know, US mobile providers generally do this without being forced by the government.Mindstab Thrull said:Wow. A country telling the providers of a key utility "you're a basic need these days, you can't cut people off just because they got a cap"... Kudos to South Korea. One can only hope this train of thought filters eventually to the West. Fingers crossed it's within the next decade! -
hotaru251 given todays society of always online it SHOULD be free, even if just basic, for the world.Reply -
voyteck I'm surprised there are any limits in a country like (South) Korea. In Poland, for example, we haven't had limits for at least 20 years or so. I pay roughly $15 for 500/150 Mbps (fiber) and I'm able to use that speed 24/7.Reply -
heffeque Reply
This is not about cable/fiber internet, it's about 4G/5G internet.voyteck said:I'm surprised there are any limits in a country like (South) Korea. In Poland, for example, we haven't had limits for at least 20 years or so. I pay roughly $15 for 500/150 Mbps (fiber) and I'm able to use that speed 24/7.
Fairly cheap unlimited plans have been available in many European countries for quite a few years now, so I'm surprised this is new to South Korea, land of Samsung and LG.
Example 1:
In Spain there's this low cost Romanian brand (Digi) where you can get 500/500 Mbps fiber connection (unlimited), with 2 mobile phone lines with unlimited calls + unlimited 5G data on both lines... all for 22 €/month; up to 37 €/month if you choose 10/10 Gbps (which is in practice more like 7.7/7.7 Gbps, but still... great for the price).
Non-low cost versions are more expensive, but yeah... unlimited 5G data isn't that strange to see.
Example 2:
In France, there have been unlimited plans for years now too, but additionally, very recently there's a low cost brand (Free) that offers an unlimited plan data that's valid not only in France, but also for roaming in 135 countries (including South Korea); additionally it includes a VPN which is a crazy good deal in my opinion. It's not cheap (29.99 €/month per line) but... heck, it's awesome for people who travel a lot. No more need for traveling eSIMs.
So... yeah, as mentioned before: I'm surprised that South Korea is just now catching up. -
Shiznizzle Reply
That is not Spain wide. This sounds like Madrid, Barcelona or any of the other big cities. Not available where my parents live and certainly not for that price with what you say is included. They live near Malaga on the coast so are well within reach of packages like that. Spain is, at least in the south, upgrading their lines everywhere to fiber. My parents were forcefully upgraded to fiber with price staying the same. They wanted the whole urbanization on the same lines.heffeque said:This is not about cable/fiber internet, it's about 4G/5G internet.
Fairly cheap unlimited plans have been available in many European countries for quite a few years now, so I'm surprised this is new to South Korea, land of Samsung and LG.
Example 1:
In Spain there's this low cost Romanian brand (Digi) where you can get 500/500 Mbps fiber connection (unlimited), with 2 mobile phone lines with unlimited calls + unlimited 5G data on both lines... all for 22 €/month; up to 37 €/month if you choose 10/10 Gbps (which is in practice more like 7.7/7.7 Gbps, but still... great for the price).
Non-low cost versions are more expensive, but yeah... unlimited 5G data isn't that strange to see.
Example 2:
In France, there have been unlimited plans for years now too, but additionally, very recently there's a low cost brand (Free) that offers an unlimited plan data that's valid not only in France, but also for roaming in 135 countries (including South Korea); additionally it includes a VPN which is a crazy good deal in my opinion. It's not cheap (29.99 €/month per line) but... heck, it's awesome for people who travel a lot. No more need for traveling eSIMs.
So... yeah, as mentioned before: I'm surprised that South Korea is just now catching up.
"400 Kbps might not sound like much, especially given that 5G can reach peak speeds in excess of 1 Gbps and standard-definition video streaming requires speeds of around 5 Mbps as a baseline, but it’s more than enough for very rudimentary activities like messaging and VoIP audio, or two-factor authentication.@
We used VOIP on Roger Wilco in the 1990's. That was on 56k modems. 400Kb lines are capable of a great many things and i paid for quite while to get that service on a monhtly basis. -
voyteck Reply
OK, my bad. But fiber or 5G--it doesn't matter, the 'home' 5G version ($20) offered by my mobile provider is unlimited anyway (except the speed falls to 512 kbps beyound a 500m radius).heffeque said:This is not about cable/fiber internet, it's about 4G/5G internet.
Fairly cheap unlimited plans have been available in many European countries for quite a few years now, so I'm surprised this is new to South Korea, land of Samsung and LG. -
ch3mn3y Reply
He made mistake, but also was right with his first comment. In Poland around 10-12 years ago high/highest tiers of contracts had "unlimited" internet - after using available data it slowed down to 1 Mbps. Now all plans, except some prepaid plans and very cheap "mostly-for-calling" plans doesn't have that.heffeque said:This is not about cable/fiber internet, it's about 4G/5G internet.
Fairly cheap unlimited plans have been available in many European countries for quite a few years now, so I'm surprised this is new to South Korea, land of Samsung and LG.
So it's also surprise for me that SK didn't have it till today and with "only" 400.