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Edition of 10:00 CETThursday, June 25, 2026
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Justice & LawThursday, June 25, 2026

Mexico’s Mobile Registration Deadline Nears With 60 Million Lines at Risk of Suspension

As the 30 June cutoff approaches, only 43 percent of active lines have been linked to a national ID, prompting Senate proposals for a year-long extension and warnings of a digital exclusion crisis.

Mexico’s mandatory mobile phone registration drive has reached just 62.5 million of the country’s 144.5 million active lines, according to the national telecoms regulator, the CRT, leaving nearly 60 million users facing service suspension when the deadline expires on 30 June. The policy, which requires every prepaid and postpaid number to be linked to the holder’s unique population registry code (CURP) and a valid identity document, was designed to strip anonymity from mobile services and disrupt extortion, fraud and kidnapping rings. With six days remaining, the registration rate stands at 43 percent, a figure that opposition lawmakers and civil-society groups describe as evidence of an operational crisis that could trigger an involuntary “phone blackout” for millions of Mexicans.

President Claudia Sheinbaum’s administration has defended the measure as a public-security necessity, noting that Mexico is one of the few countries where prepaid SIMs are not routinely tied to a verified identity. The CRT and the newly created Digital Transformation and Telecommunications Agency argue that linking every line to a real person will help law enforcement trace criminal calls and reduce the estimated 5.7 million extortion attempts recorded each year. However, the government has signalled flexibility: Sheinbaum stated that a decision on a possible extension would be announced on 26 June, and officials have acknowledged that forcing a mass re-registration of existing users would be “premature” without adequate infrastructure.

In the Senate, the opposition Movimiento Ciudadano party has tabled a bill to extend the registration window from 120 to 360 working days, warning that a sudden disconnection would sever access to banking apps, government services, education platforms and health consultations for low-income and rural communities that rely almost exclusively on mobile internet. The conservative Partido Acción Nacional has separately demanded a 180-day moratorium, citing reports of lines being linked to citizens’ identities without their consent and a lack of a clear mechanism to correct errors. Business groups are split: the national chamber of commerce, Concanaco Servytur, has refused to request a delay, insisting that citizens must assume responsibility and register immediately, while the banking association has urged customers to complete the process to avoid disruptions to mobile authentication, though BBVA México clarified that its app will remain accessible via Wi-Fi even if mobile data is cut.

Mexico’s experience sits within a broader global trend. According to the GSMA, around 160 governments now require identity verification for mobile subscriptions. In Indonesia, a new regulation taking effect on 1 July 2026 will mandate facial-recognition checks for all new SIM purchases, but the communications ministry has explicitly exempted existing subscribers from re-registration, a contrast that analysts in Southeast Asia attribute to Jakarta’s desire to avoid the kind of public backlash and logistical bottlenecks now visible in Mexico. In Argentina, a provincial legislator in Salta has separately proposed banning cell phones inside prisons to curb extortion calls, underscoring the regional focus on mobile-linked crime. The CRT is expected to clarify on 26 June whether the Mexican deadline will be extended or whether a phased, rather than immediate, suspension of unregistered lines will be adopted.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

28%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressLatin American press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Indonesia will require facial recognition for new SIM card registrations starting July 2026, but existing users are not obliged to re-register. The new regulation replaces previous identity verification methods and aims to strengthen security in telecommunications.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgencySkepticism

Mexico faces a June 30 deadline to link mobile lines to the national ID, with over 60 million numbers at risk of suspension. The private sector opposes an extension, while political voices warn of a 'telephone blackout' affecting banking, health, and education services.

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Upd. 09:49 AM2 languages · 5 outlets
5 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Thursday, June 25, 2026

Mexico’s Mobile Registration Deadline Nears With 60 Million Lines at Risk of Suspension

As the 30 June cutoff approaches, only 43 percent of active lines have been linked to a national ID, prompting Senate proposals for a year-long extension and warnings of a digital exclusion crisis.

Mexico’s mandatory mobile phone registration drive has reached just 62.5 million of the country’s 144.5 million active lines, according to the national telecoms regulator, the CRT, leaving nearly 60 million users facing service suspension when the deadline expires on 30 June. The policy, which requires every prepaid and postpaid number to be linked to the holder’s unique population registry code (CURP) and a valid identity document, was designed to strip anonymity from mobile services and disrupt extortion, fraud and kidnapping rings. With six days remaining, the registration rate stands at 43 percent, a figure that opposition lawmakers and civil-society groups describe as evidence of an operational crisis that could trigger an involuntary “phone blackout” for millions of Mexicans.

President Claudia Sheinbaum’s administration has defended the measure as a public-security necessity, noting that Mexico is one of the few countries where prepaid SIMs are not routinely tied to a verified identity. The CRT and the newly created Digital Transformation and Telecommunications Agency argue that linking every line to a real person will help law enforcement trace criminal calls and reduce the estimated 5.7 million extortion attempts recorded each year. However, the government has signalled flexibility: Sheinbaum stated that a decision on a possible extension would be announced on 26 June, and officials have acknowledged that forcing a mass re-registration of existing users would be “premature” without adequate infrastructure.

In the Senate, the opposition Movimiento Ciudadano party has tabled a bill to extend the registration window from 120 to 360 working days, warning that a sudden disconnection would sever access to banking apps, government services, education platforms and health consultations for low-income and rural communities that rely almost exclusively on mobile internet. The conservative Partido Acción Nacional has separately demanded a 180-day moratorium, citing reports of lines being linked to citizens’ identities without their consent and a lack of a clear mechanism to correct errors. Business groups are split: the national chamber of commerce, Concanaco Servytur, has refused to request a delay, insisting that citizens must assume responsibility and register immediately, while the banking association has urged customers to complete the process to avoid disruptions to mobile authentication, though BBVA México clarified that its app will remain accessible via Wi-Fi even if mobile data is cut.

Mexico’s experience sits within a broader global trend. According to the GSMA, around 160 governments now require identity verification for mobile subscriptions. In Indonesia, a new regulation taking effect on 1 July 2026 will mandate facial-recognition checks for all new SIM purchases, but the communications ministry has explicitly exempted existing subscribers from re-registration, a contrast that analysts in Southeast Asia attribute to Jakarta’s desire to avoid the kind of public backlash and logistical bottlenecks now visible in Mexico. In Argentina, a provincial legislator in Salta has separately proposed banning cell phones inside prisons to curb extortion calls, underscoring the regional focus on mobile-linked crime. The CRT is expected to clarify on 26 June whether the Mexican deadline will be extended or whether a phased, rather than immediate, suspension of unregistered lines will be adopted.

Source divergence

Justice & Law · 5 outlets · 2 languages

28%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral17%
Critical83%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressLatin American press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Indonesia will require facial recognition for new SIM card registrations starting July 2026, but existing users are not obliged to re-register. The new regulation replaces previous identity verification methods and aims to strengthen security in telecommunications.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgencySkepticism

Mexico faces a June 30 deadline to link mobile lines to the national ID, with over 60 million numbers at risk of suspension. The private sector opposes an extension, while political voices warn of a 'telephone blackout' affecting banking, health, and education services.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 2 languages

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