The Konektadong Pinoy Act is now law. Its main goal: make internet in the Philippines cheaper, faster, and more widely available by opening the market to more players. But how exactly could this affect your monthly bill—and what should you watch out for?
1. More Players = More Choices
Before, only telcos with a congressional franchise could operate. Now, smaller ISPs and new entrants (including foreign players like satellite providers) can join the market more easily.
For you: More competition means companies must fight harder for your subscription—by lowering prices or improving service.
2. Better Service, Faster Speeds
With more ISPs entering, expect upgrades in customer service, coverage, and speed. No more “take it or leave it” from the duopoly.
For you: ISPs will have to earn your loyalty, not assume it.
3. Shared Infrastructure = Faster Rollout
The law pushes for infrastructure sharing—towers, fiber, ducts. If enforced properly, it will cut rollout costs and speed up connections in underserved areas.
For you: Faster installations in your town or barangay, and potentially fewer dead spots.
4. Spectrum Reform Could Change the Game
Most mobile data frequencies are locked in the hands of two telcos. The law requires a spectrum review in 3 months and a new Spectrum Management Framework in a year.
For you: Fairer spectrum allocation could mean more competition for mobile data, leading to lower mobile internet costs.
5. Where It Could Go Wrong
The catch: the law still needs Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR). Telcos could try to tilt these rules back in their favor, for example by:
- Setting impossible speed or coverage standards that only big players can meet.
- Making infrastructure sharing “optional” instead of mandatory.
- Keeping spectrum locked up under existing allocations.
For you: If regulators aren’t careful, your internet bill may stay high, service won’t improve, and competition will stall.
Bottom Line
The promise of Konektadong Pinoy is real: lower bills, better service, and more choices. But everything depends on the IRR. If regulators hold the line against subtle telco maneuvers, consumers stand to win big. If not, it could be business as usual—just wrapped in new packaging.
