Orange, SFR, Bouygues Telecom and Free are among the 10 operators offering the cheapest mobile data in the world.
Think your mobile bill is too high? You will be able to relativize. Why even if the recent increases of Orange, Bouygues and SFR makes you hassled, French operators are some of the cheapest in the world. In any case, this is what emerges ranking established by Cable.co.uka UK price comparison site specializing in offers from mobile operators and internet service providers.
France in the top 10 countries where data is the cheapest
Cable.co.uk has compared the average price of a gigabyte of mobile data by country. To establish its ranking, the comparator was based on around 5,000 data offers offered in 233 countries. The result is an interactive map on which each country compared has been assigned a color corresponding to a defined price range (expressed in dollars). Countries with the lowest average prices for a gigabyte of mobile data are shown in blue, while those with the highest prices are in fuchsia.
By hovering over each country compared, you can get the ranking, the average price of a gigabyte of mobile data, as well as the highest and lowest tariff. The comparator also had the good idea to indicate the number of offers compared, as well as the date on which these prices were recorded.
It thus emerges that France is 7And Country where mobile data is the cheapest in the world, with an average price of 23 cents per gigabyte. To access the cheapest gigabyte of data, you will need to subscribe in Israel (4 cents), Italy (12 cents), San Marino (14 cents), Fiji (15 cents) or India (17 cents). If you live on the British island of St. Helena, you’ll need to use your mobile data sparingly. This is where the price of a gigabyte of data is the highest in the world since it has been billed… $41!
More generally, the highest prices are concentrated in the Americas where a gigabyte of data is billed on average between 4 and 5 dollars, and in sub-Saharan Africa where it will cost you an average of 4.47 dollars. European prices remain quite low with an average of $2.72 in Western Europe and $1.67 in Eastern Europe.
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