Close Menu
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
What's On

Video. Eurovision winner Dara turns Sofia into a giant ‘Bangaranga’ party

May 20, 2026

Are lasers the key to GPS like navigation on the Moon?

May 20, 2026

The world has 6 months to avert Hormuz-linked food crisis, says UN – POLITICO

May 20, 2026

As Iran mulls tariffs on Hormuz internet cables, how might the fees threaten Europe?

May 20, 2026

Tehran’s tiered internet leaves most Iranians in the dark 82 days on

May 20, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian Europe
Newsletter
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
Home»World
World

Tehran’s tiered internet leaves most Iranians in the dark 82 days on

By staffMay 20, 20264 Mins Read
Tehran’s tiered internet leaves most Iranians in the dark 82 days on
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

By&nbspEuronews Persian

Published on 20/05/2026 – 13:02 GMT+2•Updated
13:18

Iran’s government said on Tuesday it could not say when the country’s 82-day internet blackout would end, as new data showed the shutdown has cost the economy more than $1 billion and a tiered access system has emerged that critics say gives internet to officials and professionals while cutting off ordinary citizens.

Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani, responding to questions about when international internet access would be restored, said the administration of President Masoud Pezeshkian opposed restrictions on internet use but could not provide a timeline.

“With the mandate the president has given (Iran’s First Vice President Mohammad Reza) Aref, we are trying, while taking into account all existing issues, the wishes of the supreme leader and the relevant considerations, to untie the knots around the internet so that we can arrive at a fairer situation,” she said.

International internet access was severed roughly an hour after the joint US-Israeli strike on Iran on 28 February, following a blackout previously imposed by the Tehran regime as part of the crackdown on country-wide anti-austerity protests that reached their peak in January.

More than 82 days later, most Iranians cannot access global platforms. A small number have maintained access through three mechanisms that critics say have hardened into a class system.

Three tiers of internet

At the top is what Iranians call “white internet” — unfiltered access that senior Islamic Republic officials have long used and which was gradually extended during Hassan Rouhani’s presidency to journalists whose names were submitted to the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.

Reza, a journalist in Tehran, said he has had white internet since 2018 and faced no disruption during the complete internet shutdown of November 2019 either.

Mansour Beytaf, former editor-in-chief of the economic daily Taadol, said he refused to hand over his personal phone number to obtain the privilege.

“Free access to the internet is a public right. You cannot give that privilege to some and deny it to others. It is blatant discrimination,” he told Euronews.

Below white internet sits “Internet Pro” — also marketed as “stable business internet” — which provides selected categories of users, including registered companies, journalists, lawyers, academics and medical professionals, with limited access to a capped list of international platforms, typically no more than 10.

Access to Telegram and WhatsApp is generally stable for Internet Pro users, while Instagram, YouTube and X are unreliable.

The tier structure tightens further for specific professions. University lecturers are largely confined to academic databases and Google Scholar. Doctors have access mainly to WhatsApp.

Internet Pro costs 40,000 tomans per gigabyte — roughly €0.20 at current exchange rates. Those without it are paying around 500,000 tomans per gigabyte for commercially available VPNs, more than 12 times as much.

Alireza, a 40-year-old café owner in Tehran who does not qualify for Internet Pro, said he spends 15 million tomans — around €75 — a month to maintain 1 gigabyte of daily VPN access, a sharp reduction from the unlimited browsing he previously used for business.

“In which country does using the internet cost this much?” he told Euronews. “Just because there’s a war on, should the Iranian people be deprived of the internet?”

The economic toll

Abbas Ashtiani, head of the blockchain commission at the national IT guild organisation, told state agency IRNA in late April that the internet outages had inflicted around $1 billion (€862 million) in damage on Iran’s digital economy over the first 50 days of the shutdown — including direct losses, lost profits and other harms.

He put daily losses at between $30 million and $35 million (€26.8 million and €30 million).

Beytaf told Euronews that by mid-May, and without counting indirect losses, the shutdown had caused businesses 16.3 trillion tomans (€181 million at official market rates) in lost profits.

Those hardest hit have been sellers who ran businesses on Instagram, WhatsApp and Telegram — many of them informal traders who do not qualify for Internet Pro and cannot afford VPN costs.

Digikala, one of Iran’s largest e-commerce platforms, has laid off staff due to reduced turnover.

Mohajerani said on Tuesday that Internet Pro was designed for businesses and was not intended as a general solution to internet shutdowns.

She described the government’s position as opposing all discrimination and regarding internet access as a right for all citizens.

Critics have noted a contradiction at the centre of the Tehran’s position: Pezeshkian chairs both the government, which says it opposes discrimination, and the Supreme National Security Council, which approved the Internet Pro system.

The answer, analysts inside Iran suggest, lies in the Islamic Republic’s dual sovereignty structure, in which the president does not hold ultimate executive authority — making his stated opposition to the tiered system largely symbolic.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Video. Eurovision winner Dara turns Sofia into a giant ‘Bangaranga’ party

Tripoli court acquits 31 Gaddafi-era officials of crushing 2011 Libyan uprising

Video. China’s Xi holds welcome ceremony for Putin

Video. Watch: Arsenal fans go wild after first Premier League title in 22 years

Arsenal wins the Premier League ending 22-year wait after Manchester City draws with Bournemouth

Video. Chinese youths greet Putin on arrival in Beijing

Video. Giant Pele statue installed outside stadium ahead of 2026 World Cup

Gulf states talk Trump out of Iran strikes in a show of regional influence

UAE says mystery drones targeting nuclear plant came from Iraq

Editors Picks

Are lasers the key to GPS like navigation on the Moon?

May 20, 2026

The world has 6 months to avert Hormuz-linked food crisis, says UN – POLITICO

May 20, 2026

As Iran mulls tariffs on Hormuz internet cables, how might the fees threaten Europe?

May 20, 2026

Tehran’s tiered internet leaves most Iranians in the dark 82 days on

May 20, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Europe and world news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

The UN has bad news for global growth as Middle East crisis continues

May 20, 2026

Google announces sweeping AI overhaul of its search engine

May 20, 2026

Czech hospital to monitor doctor exposed to Ebola in Uganda – POLITICO

May 20, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Europe. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.