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Internet in Belgium

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Internet in Belgium has a high level of adoption and engagement, with a 93% uptake rate among individuals as of 2022, higher than the EU average of 89%. The country is on par with the EU average regarding digital skills, with 54% of its population having at least basic digital competencies. Illustrated through initiatives like theBeCentral digital campus, Belgium has created programs to boost digital literacy, and has trained over 425,000 students since 2017 to narrow the digital skills gap.[1]

In 2022, Belgium's fixedbroadband adoption, providing speeds of at least 100 Mbps, was 67%, higher than the EU average of 55%. Mobile broadband in Belgium saw growth with the adoption rate reaching 90% in 2021, slightly above the EU average of 87%. Additionally, Belgium advanced in digital public services, exceeding the EU average in several key indicators.[1]

Law enforcement in Belgium does take action against crimes committed on the Internet and filters websites hosting content that is illegal under Belgian law. Individual freedom of expression online is typically not violated by the government unless the expression could be classified asholocaust denial orincitement to hatred.[2]

Status

[edit]
  • Internet users: 11.15 million, 95.8% of the population, 27th in the world (2024).[3][4]
  • Fixed broadband: 5.19 million subscribers, 35th in the world, 44.2% of the population, 18th in the world (2024).[5]
  • Mobile broadband: 11.58 million subscribers, 70th in the world, 98.7% of the population, 89th in the world (2024).[6]
  • Internet hosts: 5.2 million, 21st in the world (2012).[7]
  • Top level domains:.be[7].brussels.gent.vlaanderen
  • IPv4 addresses: 11.1 million, 0.3% of worldwide total, 1,068 addresses per person (2012).[8]

Broadband

[edit]

Fixed broadband

[edit]

According to theEuropean Commission's Digital Decade Country Report 2023, Belgium's progress in fixed broadband infrastructure varies compared to the EU average. In 2022, fixed broadband uptake (at least 100 Mbps) in Belgium reached 67%, surpassing the EU average of 55%. The coverage of very high-capacity networks (VHCN) in Belgium stood at 78%, slightly higher than the EU average of 73%. However,fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) coverage, which increased from 7% in 2020 to 17% in 2022, remains notably lower than the EU average of 56%.[9][1]

Mobile broadband

[edit]

In Belgium, advancements inmobile broadband infrastructure have been notable, characterized by a rise in adoption rates from 84% in 2018 to 90% in 2021, slightly surpassing the EU average of 87% in the same year. Despite progress, Belgium's5G coverage expanded from 4% in 2020 to 30% in 2022, remaining notably below the EU average of 81%. However, Belgium's allocation of 5G spectrum reached 66% in 2023, aligning closely with the EU average of 68%.[1]

Digital public services

[edit]

In 2022, Belgium made advancements in digital public services, exceeding the EU average in key metrics. Notably, 88% of citizens are utilizinge-government services, higher than the EU average of 74%. Additionally, Belgium's adoption rate ofe-health records stands at 85%, which is above the EU average of 72%. In terms of specific scores, Belgium achieved 81 out of 100 for digital public services for citizens and 88 out of 100 for businesses, both higher than the respective EU averages of 77 and 84 out of 100. Investments totaling EUR 586 million have been allocated to digitizingpublic administration, including the justice system.[1]

Cable

[edit]

Belgium also has cable networks. The biggest one, taken over byTelenet in 1997, covers almost all ofFlanders. Speeds vary from 100 Mbit/s to 1 Gbit/s down.[10]

As of June 2020, 93% of Telenet's nodes support Gigabit speeds. If Gigabit speeds are not available on a customer's node, the second fastest speed Telenet offers for residential plans, is 400 Mbit/s.

Even with Gigabit download speeds, upload speeds are limited to 'only' 40 Mbit/s for residential plans. It is believed Telenet will not increase their upload speed because DSL can not exceed 40 Mbit/s upload due to hardware restrictions Mbit/s upload due to hardware restrictions, until Proximus rolls out supervectoring.This means that for most households, 40 Mbit/s upload is the maximum they can get.Only providers using fiber and LTE networks offer faster uploads, but home internet over LTE is nowhere near as popular (yet), and FttH networks are still pretty new in Belgium and not widely available.

As of 2020, Telenet and VOO are the only owners of coaxial networks (originally built for transferring radio and TV signals).Other providers use their infrastructure as well.

Providers
  • Orange Belgium (all of Belgium, using both Telenet and VOO's network)
  • Telenet.[11] (Flanders (Dutch speaking part) and multilingual Brussels)
  • VOO.[12] (Wallonia (French speaking part) and multilingual Brussels)

Bandwidth and transfer limits

[edit]

Download speeds in Brussels are now reaching a good level,[when?] however, the majority of Belgians have bandwidth caps in place to limit the amount of data users can transfer through their connection. Typically these are between 5 GB/month and 1000 GB/month and show that the competition in this market has not been strong enough to drive out these practices which have vanished in other western and eastern European countries.[according to whom?]

In June 2008 the Belgian Internet providers Dommel[13] and YabuADSL announced nationwide ADSL subscriptions without the data limits.

In February 2010 the major operators of Belgium, including Telenet and Belgacom, announced tariffs with unlimited caps, but still with FUP formulas (fair usage policy).[14][15] However, some of them have adapted the FUP so it only counts on specific hours of the day.[16]

IPv6 adoption

[edit]
Further information:IPv6 deployment § Belgium

In 2014, Belgium has the world's highest adoption rate ofIPv6 connectivity.[17][18]

Internet censorship

[edit]
Further information:Websites blocked in Belgium
  • Not individually classified by theOpenNet Initiative (ONI), but included in ONI's regional overview for Europe.[19]
  • Freedom House reports in itsFreedom in the World 2013 report thatfreedom of speech andthe press are guaranteed by the constitution and generally respected by the government and that Internet access is unrestricted.[20]

There are no government restrictions on access to the Internet or credible reports that the government monitorse-mail or Internetchat rooms without appropriate legal authority. Individuals and groups engage in the expression of views via the Internet, including by e-mail. The Belgian constitution and law provide for freedom of speech, including for members of the press, and the government generally respects these rights in practice. An independent press, an effective judiciary, and a functioning democratic political system combine to ensure freedom of speech and press. The constitution and legal code prohibit arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home, or correspondence, and the government generally respects these prohibitions in practice.[21]

Subject to warrants requested by the prosecutor all Belgian Internet providers have been filtering several websites at the DNS level since April 2009. This may be done when the websites are engaged in illegal activities or when they display information that is "contrary to public order or morality".[22] People who browse the Internet using one of these providers and hit a blocked website are redirected to a page that claims that the content of the website is illegal under Belgian law and therefore blocked. In contrast to other countries, the Web sites were filtered not because of displaying pornographic content but in order to guarantee the privacy rights of suspects or criminals who committed sexual offenses against children and whose identity was accordingly revealed in the targeted Web sites.[19]

Holocaust denial andincitement to hatred are criminal offenses punishable by a minimum of eight days (for Holocaust denial) and one month (incitement to hatred) up to one-year in prison and fines, plus a possible revocation of the right to vote or run for public office.[21]

Web browsers

[edit]

As of 2024, most used web browsers according to Statcounter were:

Web browserMarket shareReference
Chrome54%[23]
Safari26%[23]
Edge8.8%[23]
Firefox4.2%[23]
Samsung Internet3.2%[23]
Opera1.4%[23]
Android0.31%[23]
Instabridge0.15%[23]
Ecosia0.12%[23]
other0.36%[23]

As of 2024, most used web browsers according to Cloudflare were:

Web browserMarket shareReference
Chrome57%[24]
Safari18%[24]
Edge10%[24]
Firefox5.9%[24]
Samsung Internet4.3%[24]
Opera1.2%[24]
Brave1.0%[24]
DuckDuckGo Private Browser0.21%[24]
Ecosia0.10%[24]
Avast Secure Browser0.09%[24]
Aloha Browser0.07%[24]
Mi Browser0.07%[24]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcde"Digital Decade Country Report 2023 Belgium".European Commission. 2023.
  2. ^"Belgium".Archived from the original on September 28, 2023.
  3. ^"Percentage of Individuals using the internet 2000-2024".International Telecommunication Union. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  4. ^"Statista, Number of internet users in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands as of January 2024". Retrieved2025-08-26.
  5. ^"Fixed broadband subscriptions per 100 inhabitants 2024".Dynamic Report, ITU ITC EYEInternational Telecommunication Union. Retrieved2025-08-26.
  6. ^"Active mobile-broadband subscriptions per 100 inhabitants 2024".Dynamic Report, ITU ITC EYE,International Telecommunication Union. Retrieved2025-08-25.
  7. ^ab"Belgium Communications",World Factbook, U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  8. ^Select FormatsArchived 2009-05-13 atarchive.today, Country IP Blocks. Accessed on 2 April 2012. Note: Site is said to be updated daily.
  9. ^"Country reports - Digital Decade report 2023 | Shaping Europe's digital future".digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu. 2023-09-27. Retrieved2024-02-28.
  10. ^"Optie Speedboost 500 Business". telenet.be.be. Archived fromthe original on 2018-02-05. Retrieved2018-02-04.
  11. ^"Telenet homepage". Telenet.be. Retrieved2013-11-10.
  12. ^"Opérateur Internet, TV, GSM et téléphonie en Belgique - VOO". Voo.be. Retrieved2013-11-10.
  13. ^"Belgische isp Dommel schaft datalimiet voor Homeconnect af - IT Pro - Nieuws - Tweakers". Life.tweakers.net. Archived fromthe original on 2008-07-06. Retrieved2013-11-10.
  14. ^Van Leemputten, Pieterjan (2010-02-08)."Telenet: ongelimiteerd internet aan 100 Mbps" [Telenet: unlimited internet at 100 Mbps].ZDNet (in Dutch).
  15. ^van Miltenburg, Olaf (2010-02-05)."Belgacom schrapt downloadlimiet voor duurste abonnement" [Belgacom removes download limit for most expensive subscription].Tweakers (in Dutch).
  16. ^Cludts, Dries (2015-03-09)."Telenet verhoogt downloadvolume voor grootverbruikers" [Telenet upgrades download volume for bulk consumers].ZDNet (in Dutch).
  17. ^Sayer, Peter (2014-06-26)."IPv6 usage is climbing in Europe, while Asian countries are most ready for 4K TV, says study".PCWorld.
  18. ^"Google IPv6 statistics".
  19. ^ab"ONI Regional Overview: Europe", OpenNet Initiative, March 2010.
  20. ^Country report: Belgium",Freedom in the World 2013, Freedom House, 11 January 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  21. ^ab"Belgium",Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, U.S. Department of State, 22 March 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  22. ^Grote Belgische firewall geactiveerd (Belgian Grand firewall activated)Archived 2018-08-17 at theWayback Machine(in Dutch), Luc Van Braekel, LVB.net, 21 April 2009. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  23. ^abcdefghij"Browser Market Share Belgium".statcounter.com. RetrievedMarch 23, 2025.
  24. ^abcdefghijkl"Browser Market Share Report for 2024 Q4".cloudflare.com. Cloudflare, Inc. January 21, 2025. RetrievedMarch 23, 2025.

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