Iran internet restoration announced by president on 26 May 2026
Iran announced a decree on 26 May 2026 directing the telecommunications ministry to restore internet service, according to Iranian state agencies. The decision, attributed to President Masoud Pezeshkian by Tasnim and Fars, instructs the Ministry of Communications to return connectivity “to its state before January,” a step widely described as an Iran internet restoration order in local reporting.
Officials did not specify an exact timeline or the technical approach for reconnecting to the global network. Meanwhile, independent monitors reported that most Iranians had been unable to reach the wider internet for about 87–90 days, with access largely limited to the national intranet and select users on costly virtual private networks, according to NetBlocks and other observers.
Iran internet restoration: immediate scope and uncertainty
The decree orders the ministry to reestablish service to its pre-January status, yet it leaves open how broadly or quickly that will occur. Additionally, the ministry has not published a schedule or a technical plan, and state media coverage so far offers few operational details.
NetBlocks and other monitoring groups reported that the nationwide internet blackout followed mass unrest earlier in the year and a later escalation in military hostilities that affected cross-border connectivity. Therefore, independent verification of any phased reconnection will depend on external monitors and reports from inside Iran.
Economic losses from the prolonged internet blackout
Officials and industry sources previously warned of heavy economic costs during the outage. In late January the communications minister said the daily economic losses reached roughly $34.5 million, a figure cited in Iranian reporting and consistent with assessments that outages harm trade, fintech services, and small businesses that rely on foreign payments.
Furthermore, export-oriented sectors and digital entrepreneurs faced severe disruption, and the limited availability of international connectivity through ‘white SIM’ allocations or premium VPNs only mitigated some damage for diplomatic and privileged users. Consequently, analysts say the economic impact will extend beyond the outage period as firms rebuild supply chains and customer access.
Access, censorship and the national intranet
Since the initial curbs in January and the subsequent cut at the end of February, ordinary users in Iran have been largely confined to a national intranet that hosts state-approved services. Additionally, access to many global social platforms and independent news sites remained heavily restricted even before the blackout, according to digital rights groups.
Authorities introduced “white SIM” provisions during the disruption, permitting limited international access for diplomats, selected journalists, and some public figures. However, rights advocates and technical analysts warned that reopening the wider internet without parallel changes to censorship policy might still leave many global platforms inaccessible to ordinary citizens.
Technical and monitoring challenges
Reconnecting a largely isolated national network to the global internet poses technical and security considerations. Internet exchanges, undersea cable routes, routing tables, and filtering infrastructure all require coordinated action by operators and regulators, experts say, and those tasks can take days to weeks depending on the scope of disconnection.
Meanwhile, independent monitors such as NetBlocks remain crucial for tracking actual connectivity levels. Therefore, observers will watch for independent confirmations of restored international routing, as official statements alone may not immediately reflect on-the-ground reachability for ordinary users.
Political and legal context
The restoration decision comes amid ongoing political tensions and security concerns that originally prompted the shutdowns, according to Iranian reporting and international analysts. Additionally, state media framed the move as an administrative step, while critics emphasized that reopening the internet does not automatically guarantee unfettered access given existing censorship frameworks.
Legal authorities in Iran have long maintained technical controls over digital traffic for content filtering and national security reasons. Consequently, any phased Iran internet restoration could be accompanied by persistent restrictions on specific platforms and services unless accompanied by explicit policy reforms.
International reactions to connectivity changes
Global digital-rights organizations and foreign governments have repeatedly called for open access during previous outages, noting the humanitarian and economic implications of prolonged blackouts. Additionally, multinational companies with local partners in Iran have reported disruptions in communications and payments, and they will likely welcome any sustained reconnection.
What to watch next
Readers should monitor three key indicators: statements and technical updates from the Ministry of Communications, independent connectivity reports from monitoring groups, and on-the-ground accounts from Iranian users and businesses. Furthermore, analysts will watch whether restoration includes unrestricted access to major international platforms or remains limited to a controlled national intranet.
In the coming days, the timeline for Iran internet restoration may become clearer through incremental reconnections or formal ministry briefings. Therefore, follow-up reporting and third-party verification will be essential to assess the practical impact on citizens, commerce, and information flows.

