Federal Network Agency for Electricity, Gas, Telecommunications, Post and Railway

02/09/2026 | Press release | Archived content

Bundesnetzagentur identifies first effective competition in the broadband mass market in four cities

Year of issue 2026
Date of issue 2026.02.09

The Bundesnetzagenturhas today published key elements relating to the provisional findings from the analysis of the broadband mass market (Market 1 in the Recommendation on relevant product and service markets).

"For the first time we have observed that there is no longer a nationwide broadband mass market but separate, regional submarkets. The main reason for this development is accelerated fibre rollout. The Bundesnetzagentur will continue to regulate any submarkets where effective competition is absent. However, based on our provisional findings, there will no longer be a need for ex ante regulation in Munich, Cologne, Ingolstadt and Wolfsburg," said Klaus Müller, President of the Bundesnetzagentur.

longer need for regulation in Munich, Cologne, Ingolstadt and Wolfsburg

The preliminary findings from the market analysis show that the former monopolist Deutsche Telekomnow only has small market shares in Munich, Cologne, Ingolstadt and Wolfsburg. The four cities have a high degree of coverage from cable and fibre networks, with most consumers being able to choose from three different access networks.

The Bundesnetzagentur'sassessment of the situation in the Segebergdistrict in Schleswig-Holsteinis somewhat different. Although Deutsche Telekomnow only has a relatively small share of the market there, most of the alternative providers' fibre and cable networks are restricted to small areas and infrastructure competition is not sufficient to withdraw ex ante regulation. The Segebergdistrict is therefore particularly susceptible to "symmetrical regulation", where certain obligations apply to all network operators irrespective of a dominant position in the market.

There is no effective competition in Germany's other towns, cities and rural districts. Here, Deutsche Telekom still has significant market power. The Bundesnetzagenturstill considers that a need for regulation in this submarket remains, which means that the dominant undertaking will still be obliged to open up its network for other providers.

Background to the market analysis

The Bundesnetzagenturconducts regular analyses to determine which areas in the telecommunications sector require regulation. Its current analysis includes looking at how strong individual companies' positions are in the markets for broadband internet access, which includes , cable and fibre access, in all the regions across Germany.

The Bundesnetzagenturfirst identifies the available products and examines their substitutability; it then defines the geographical scope of the markets. The second step is to determine whether any of these markets require special regulation. If this is the case, the third step is to assess whether one or more companies have significant market power in the relevant market. It is justified to impose obligations on companies with significant market power. These obligations may include granting access for competitors based on approved access charges.

The key elements paper relating to the analysis of the broadband mass market is available to download at www.bundesnetzagentur.de/1095446 (in German). The key elements will be presented to and discussed with market players at a public event on 16 March 2026.

Fibre rollout in Schleswig-Holsteinis also the subject of the latest NETZtalk podcast, in which Dr Daniela Brönstrup, Vice President at the Bundesnetzagentur, talks to Julia Carstens, State Secretary at the Ministry of Economic Affairs, Transport, Employment, Technology and Tourism in Schleswig-Holstein: www.bundesnetzagentur.de/podcast.

Federal Network Agency for Electricity, Gas, Telecommunications, Post and Railway published this content on February 09, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on February 25, 2026 at 14:19 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]