Advertising & editorial notice: This page is informational. It is not sponsored by mobile operators. Offers, coverage, and prices change; confirm on official operator and regulator sites before purchasing. If we use paid advertising (e.g. Google Ads), ads are labelled by the platform and do not influence our editorial comparisons.

Independent guide · Chile · 2026

Chile mobile carriers: compare operators, 5G, and how to choose a plan

Operadores móviles en Chile: comparativa, 5G y cómo elegir plan

A neutral, expert-style overview of the main networks, coverage concepts, pricing components, prepaid vs postpaid, and a practical checklist—so you can decide with clarity, not hype.

  • Editorial focus · no checkout on this page
  • Last reviewed: April 2026
  • Citations to regulator & operators
Illustration: radio site / capacity (ffacile-racrga.com). Not a map of a specific operator network.

At a glance

  • Major retail MNOs: Movistar, Entel, WOM, Claro (market presence varies by region and segment).
  • 5G: Rolling deployment; indoor/venue experience differs from map polygons—verify locally.
  • Regulator: SUBTEL publishes market data and consumer guidance.

Operator comparison (high level)

Feature availability and performance depend on location, device, and plan tier. Use this table to frame questions—not as a performance guarantee.

Chile mobile operators — qualitative comparison

Operator Typical strengths (varies) What to verify
Movistar Broad retail footprint; convergent bundles common. 5G map vs your address/work; bundle lock-in terms.
Entel Strong historic network perception in many regions; fiber + mobile bundles. Rural route coverage if you travel; fair-use on large data buckets.
WOM Value positioning; competitive large-data plans (check terms). Indoor/edge performance in your areas; roaming add-ons.
Claro National presence; compare device financing vs SIM-only. 5G device compatibility (bands); store vs online promos.

No ranking claim: Row order is alphabetical, not a quality score.

Illustration: dense metro demand for capacity (local asset). Coverage maps are a starting point, not a speed promise.
Illustration: SIM form factors. Confirm whether your plan uses physical SIM, eSIM, or both.
Illustration: backhaul concept—radio is one link among many affecting latency.

5G coverage maps (how to use them)

Official operator maps are marketing-grade overlays: useful for directionally comparing cities and corridors, less precise for a specific apartment floor. Always test with your own handset where it matters.

Movistar Chile — coverage

Open the official map in a new tab and search your address.

Movistar map

Entel — coverage

Check 4G/5G layers and legend notes (indoor vs outdoor assumptions).

Entel map

WOM — coverage

Compare your frequent routes, not only home postcode.

WOM map

Claro Chile — coverage

Confirm band support on your phone model for 5G NSA/SA.

Claro map

Disclaimer: ffacile-racrga.com does not operate network infrastructure. Map accuracy disclaimers belong to each operator. Past performance in an area does not guarantee future speeds.

Transparent pricing breakdown (what bills include)

Chilean mobile pricing is usually a stack of plan base + optional add-ons + taxes/fees + device instalments. Below is a generic template—your cart page is authoritative.

  1. Plan base Minutes/SMS (if not unlimited), data bucket or fair-use policy, hotspot rules.
  2. Promotions Intro discounts often revert; capture screenshots and effective dates.
  3. Taxes & recurring fees VAT and telecommunication charges may apply depending on product type—verify checkout totals.
  4. Roaming & intl. Priced separately unless explicitly bundled; read fair-use for “unlimited” roaming passes.
  5. Device financing Installments may require contract term; early exit can have balances.

Reading your PDF bill (quick tips)

Line items may bundle multiple products (mobile + streaming add-on). Compare period dates: promotional credits often appear on cycle 1 but vanish on cycle 3. If a charge has no plain-language label, search the footnote code on the operator help site.

Plan selection checklist

Print or copy this list before you talk to sales or use an online configurator.

  • Primary locations: home, work, school—indoor signal quality.
  • Monthly data use (Wi‑Fi vs cellular); hotspot needs.
  • International travel frequency; eSIM support on device.
  • Need new phone vs BYOD; warranty and unlock policy.
  • Contract length, portability (keep number), exit fees.
  • Family lines: admin controls, content filters, shared data caps.

Number portability (MNP) in plain steps

Chile uses regulated mobile number portability. Exact forms differ by operator, but the sequence below is what most users experience.

1) Choose destination operator

Order a new line or portability request from the operator you want to move to. You are not cancelling the old line yourself first—portability transfers the number.

2) Identity and authorisation

Have your national ID (cédula) or valid foreign ID as required by the operator's KYC policy. Corporate lines need delegated authority documents.

3) Donor release window

There can be a scheduled cut-over window; keep both SIMs available until the new service activates. If something fails, follow the operator's rescheduling flow.

Illustration: handset used for map checks and plan comparison (local asset).

eSIM, travel SIMs, and roaming expectations

eSIM can simplify switching profiles, but profile availability depends on operator support and device model. Roaming is almost always a separate commercial product—read megabyte and speed caps.

  • Before travel: confirm outbound roaming packs on your Chile plan, or buy a local/eSIM profile at destination if cheaper.
  • VoLTE/Wi‑Fi calling abroad may be disabled even when data works—do not assume voice will behave like at home.
  • Maritime and inflight networks are third-party satellites—pricing is rarely included in “unlimited” buckets.

Glossary (quick reference)

Terms you will see on invoices, shop displays, and regulator FAQs.

MNO
Mobile network operator with licensed spectrum and owned or leased radio access network.
MVNO
Virtual operator that resells capacity on an MNO's network—compare wholesale-dependent SLAs.
Fair use / “unlimited”
Contractual policy that may slow or charge after thresholds even on marketing-unlimited plans.
NSA / SA (5G)
Non-standalone anchors on LTE control; standalone uses a 5G core—device and network must match the mode advertised.
Hotspot / tethering
Sharing mobile data to a laptop/tablet; often has a separate cap from on-phone data.
SUBTEL
Chile's telecommunications sub-secretariat—publishes sector statistics and user guidance.

Regional planning (north–south)

Chile’s geography stretches across latitudes and terrain types. A plan that feels “perfect” in Santiago may still deserve a coverage check before long coastal or Andean routes.

North (mining, desert corridors, borders)

Population clusters and industrial sites often have strong service, but low-density stretches can still be patchy—download offline maps for safety-critical travel.

Central valleys and metro rings

Highest competition and frequent promos; indoor performance still varies by building materials and small-cell density.

South (Patagonia routes, parks, fjords)

Tourist season congestion and weather outages can affect perception of speed—carry backup connectivity for emergencies if you depend on data-only VoIP.

Prepaid vs postpaid (Chile context)

Both models coexist; “better” depends on credit access, predictability, and handset needs—not hype.

Prepaid vs postpaid — comparison

Topic Prepaid (control) Postpaid (convenience)
Billing Top-ups or packs; spend capped by recharge rhythm. Monthly invoice; overages possible unless hard-capped.
Device deals Often BYOD-friendly; fewer subsidized flagship deals. Bundled instalments common; read term and total cost.
Credit check Minimal friction for basic lines. May be required for financing or premium tiers.

FAQ

Short answers; verify details on operator portals.

Security, scams, and your line

Legitimate operators will not ask for your full banking password by SMS, nor pressure you to move a number in five minutes “or lose the offer”. When in doubt, hang up and call the number printed on your invoice or SIM pack.

OTP / SMS codes

Never read one-time codes aloud to a stranger or paste them into random “verification” sites. Scammers pair stolen personal data with social engineering to trigger SIM swaps.

“Too cheap” reseller listings

If a marketplace advertises unlimited data at a fraction of retail with instant WhatsApp checkout only, treat it as high risk. Prefer official stores, banked transfers with receipts, and contracts you can read before paying.

Lost or stolen phone

Ask your operator to suspend the line remotely, then change passwords for email and banking that relied on SMS 2FA. File a police report if you need it for insurance.

Illustration: pause and verify before sharing sensitive codes (local asset).

Sources & citations

Primary references for policies, coverage tools, and market context (last accessed April 2026 for editorial setup).

  • SUBTEL (Subsecretaría de Telecomunicaciones)subtel.gob.cl Regulatory information and consumer resources for Chilean telecommunications.
  • Movistar Chile — network/coverage pages: movistar.cl
  • Entel Chile — coverage: entel.cl
  • WOM — coverage: wom.cl
  • Claro Chile — coverage: clarochile.cl

Methodology: We synthesize publicly published materials; we do not conduct independent network drive testing for this page. If official URLs change, use the operator site search for “cobertura” or “5G”.

Next step: verify on official channels

Use operator maps for your exact locations, read the commercial terms PDF, and compare checkout totals—including taxes and any handset instalments—before you commit.