Canada’s Rogers Mobile Network Outage Causes Major Disruption

Rogers Mobile Outage Affects Users Across Canada
Update 25/06/2025 1:43 p.m. ET: Rogers has informed us that the recent outage has been resolved. Though, they have not yet provided details on what caused the disruption.
The initial report follows below.
Signal Loss Hits Rogers Subscribers Nationwide
Mobile users of rogers in Canada are currently facing significant issues with their service, as many have reported losing their signal entirely. iPhone users are particularly affected, with many devices displaying an SOS mode. This indicates that these phones can only make emergency calls and send texts via satellite. The problem also impacts customers of Rogers' subsidiary brands, Fido and Chatr.
A Widespread Service Disruption
According to reports gathered from Downdetector.ca, numerous individuals across various cities—including Edmonton, Vancouver, and the Greater Toronto Area—are experiencing complete mobile service outages. Many customers have also mentioned difficulties accessing the Rogers website; while it appears to be operational for some users, others find themselves redirected to a page promoting new phone purchases rather of reaching the homepage.
The Extent of the Outage
The data from Downdetector shows tens of thousands without service at this time; however, it's likely that even more people are affected but haven't reported their issues yet. The scale suggests a serious disruption in connectivity for many Canadians relying on this network.
No Immediate Description Available
We’ve reached out to Rogers for further clarification regarding this situation and will provide updates as soon as we receive more details from them.
A Comparison to Past Incidents
This current outage does not appear to be as severe as the major incident experienced by Rogers in July 2022; though, it is indeed still significant enough to cause concern among its user base.
If you’re looking for real-time updates or want to check if yoru area is affected by this outage specifically, you can visit Downdetector's site here.