⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria Telecom doubled the base FTTH plan from 50 Mbps to 100 Mbps in April 2026 at no extra cost, with higher tiers reaching 300 Mbps, 500 Mbps, and 1 Gbps. The upgrade removes a long-standing bandwidth ceiling that constrained cloud, SaaS, and hybrid-work adoption across Algerian enterprises.

Bottom Line: Algerian CIOs should audit every office and remote-worker connection over the next 60 days and revisit paused cloud-migration projects now that 100 Mbps fiber is the new baseline.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The upgrade directly affects every Algerian enterprise running SaaS, remote work, or cloud-connected workloads — which is now the default operating model.
Action Timeline
Immediate

Plan upgrades are rolling out during Q2 2026; enterprises should audit current subscriptions and coverage in the next 30-60 days.
Key Stakeholders
CIOs, IT directors, facilities managers
Decision Type
Tactical

Requires near-term reassessment of bandwidth contracts, remote-work policy, and cloud migration plans rather than a long-horizon strategic pivot.
Priority Level
High

Bandwidth directly constrains cloud adoption, hybrid work, and SaaS strategies — three of the highest-leverage IT decisions for Algerian enterprises in 2026.

Quick Take: Audit every office and remote-worker connection over the next 60 days — any ADSL or <50 Mbps FTTH line should be upgraded now that the tariff supports 100 Mbps at the same price. Use the extra headroom to revisit cloud-migration projects that were paused on bandwidth grounds in 2024-2025, and negotiate fiber SLAs for branch offices before the copper sunset arrives in 2027.

A Bandwidth Ceiling That Held Back Cloud Adoption

For years, the dominant Algerian broadband experience was 4-20 Mbps ADSL, with FTTH available only in select neighborhoods of Algiers, Oran and a handful of other cities. Even where fiber reached, the entry tier typically capped at 20-50 Mbps — enough for HD streaming but often painful for SaaS suites, video conferencing, or cloud-synced engineering workloads.

In April 2026, Algeria Telecom announced an across-the-board speed upgrade: the base FTTH plan moves from 50 Mbps to 100 Mbps with no price change, and higher tiers scale up to 300, 500, and 1,000 Mbps. According to Ecofin Agency, the operator framed the move as part of a broader “digital leap” initiative aligned with the government’s 2027 copper phase-out plan.

This is not just a consumer upgrade. It changes the planning assumptions for every Algerian CTO who has been rationing bandwidth for remote staff, branch offices, and cloud workloads.

What Actually Changed in the April 2026 Plan

Based on the official communications relayed by Ecofin Agency and SAMENA Council, the headline changes are:

  • Base FTTH tier: 50 Mbps → 100 Mbps (same monthly fee)
  • Mid tier: 100 Mbps → 300 Mbps
  • High tier: 200 Mbps → 500 Mbps
  • Premium tier: Up to 1 Gbps for residential/SoHo customers
  • Price point: Entry-level fiber remains among the most affordable in North Africa, in the ~2,000-3,000 DZD/month range for the 100 Mbps plan

Coverage continues to expand alongside the speed bumps. Algeria Telecom has been racing to connect millions of households to FTTH, and the operator reported milestones in late 2025 indicating several million fiber-ready homes and a growing share of active connections. The new pricing structure effectively forces customers to migrate off copper as fiber becomes the default option for new and renewed contracts.

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Why This Matters for Algerian Enterprises

Bandwidth is infrastructure, and infrastructure shapes what software enterprises can realistically run. The jump from 50 Mbps to 100 Mbps sounds incremental on paper — in practice it unlocks several workload categories:

  • SaaS-heavy office setups: Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, and collaborative design tools (Figma, Miro, Autodesk cloud) become viable for branch offices and home-based staff without the sporadic freezes that plagued 20 Mbps connections.
  • Cloud video conferencing at scale: A 10-person Teams or Zoom room with screen sharing and recording needs ~15-25 Mbps of reliable upstream. 100 Mbps FTTH (with symmetric or near-symmetric profiles on some tiers) removes this as a blocker.
  • Hybrid work: Remote developers using cloud IDEs (Cursor, GitHub Codespaces, JetBrains Gateway) or remote desktop into on-prem dev environments can now work productively from home.
  • Cloud backup and disaster recovery: Nightly backups of 50-200 GB to an ARPCE-licensed cloud provider (Ayrade, ADEX, eBS) finally complete within a business-hours window.
  • ERP and CRM in the cloud: Latency-sensitive but bandwidth-modest apps (Odoo, Zoho, Salesforce) were already usable; now enterprises can pair them with document-heavy workflows.

The New Calculus for Cloud-First Strategies

Prior to 2026, Algerian enterprises evaluating cloud migration ran into a chicken-and-egg problem: the economics favored cloud, but the last-mile bandwidth was unreliable enough that teams defaulted to on-prem or self-hosted deployments. With 100 Mbps as the new baseline — and 300-1,000 Mbps available for a modest premium — that objection weakens.

CIOs should revisit three decisions that were deferred in 2024-2025:

  1. File storage strategy. Moving team drives from on-prem file servers to Google Drive, OneDrive, or a local ARPCE-licensed provider becomes practical.
  2. Dev environment location. Cloud-based IDEs and ephemeral dev environments (Gitpod, Codespaces) become viable for distributed teams.
  3. Video and training content. Internal LMS platforms that stream HD training video — previously unusable outside HQ — now work for field and regional staff.

What’s Still Missing

The upgrade solves the downstream bandwidth problem but leaves two open issues. First, international latency to European and Gulf data centers remains 40-90 ms on average, which affects real-time applications regardless of local fiber speed. Second, symmetric upload is still not guaranteed across all tiers — enterprises running self-hosted services, video production pipelines, or data-heavy uploads should confirm their specific plan’s upstream profile before committing.

For most office workloads, however, the April 2026 fiber upgrade removes the bandwidth ceiling that has shaped Algerian enterprise IT planning for the past decade.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is Algeria’s new base FTTH speed as of April 2026?

Algeria Telecom has upgraded the entry-level fiber-to-the-home plan from 50 Mbps to 100 Mbps at the same price. Higher tiers now reach 300 Mbps, 500 Mbps, and up to 1 Gbps for residential and SoHo customers.

Does the upgrade apply automatically to existing subscribers?

The operator has communicated a staged rollout in which active FTTH subscribers are migrated to the new speed matrix over the course of 2026 without a price increase. Customers can check their account portal or contact Algerie Telecom customer service to confirm when their line is upgraded.

Is 100 Mbps fiber enough to run cloud-first operations in Algeria?

For most office workloads — SaaS, video conferencing, cloud backup, collaborative tools — 100 Mbps is sufficient for teams of 5-15 people per line. Heavier use cases (large file transfers, cloud-rendered design, self-hosted services) should consider the 300 or 500 Mbps tiers, and enterprises with multiple simultaneous video meetings should budget dedicated business-grade fiber.

Sources & Further Reading