It’s almost funny how many tech brands promise “lightning-fast global connectivity,” and yet the real story begins the moment you step off a plane and your video call freezes mid-sentence. So when an independent benchmark steps in and says, actually, here’s who’s doing it best, that tends to cut through the noise. The latest Latency Report 2025 just did exactly that, and Ubigi didn’t just perform well — it took the number one spot worldwide.
What makes this interesting is that the ranking isn’t based on vague impressions or user-submitted reviews. The evaluation covered the fundamentals that actually define a good mobile data experience: latency, jitter, and packet loss. Or, translated into real language: how quickly your device speaks to the network, how stable that connection remains over time, and how much data quietly disappears along the way. Ubigi’s architecture gives it a head start. Seven strategically positioned Packet Gateways (P-GWs) across Europe, Asia, and the Americas ensure user traffic exits to the internet as close as possible to where they’re physically located — not halfway across the world. In practical terms, that means your Zoom call works just as smoothly in Lisbon or Bangkok as it does at home.
The numbers tell the story plainly: 35 ms latency in Europe, 92 ms in Asia, 5 ms jitter, and under 0.2% packet loss. That last metric is almost absurdly low for mobile networks and speaks to genuine engineering maturity rather than a marketing slogan. Field tests from Lisbon, Bangkok, Mexico City and Cape Town confirmed the results: connectivity stayed predictable, smooth and stable, even for VPN, cloud platforms, or streaming — the exact use cases most eSIMs still struggle with.
Ubigi’s strategy combines serious infrastructure with smart alliances. Partnerships with major operators such as Orange and AIS mean users don’t have to fall back on low-tier roaming agreements. Meanwhile, the roadmap is getting even more ambitious, with four new Packet Gateways planned over the next year, expanding coverage in North America, Europe and Africa.
Jacques Bonifay, President of Transatel, puts it sharply: this recognition isn’t about peak speeds measured in controlled lab conditions — it’s about consistent, real-world connection quality anywhere in the world. And honestly, that’s what travelling teams, consultants, freelancers, remote workers and global SMEs actually need: not hype, but performance.
Where many providers are still selling theoretical potential, Ubigi is increasingly positioned as the one quietly delivering the real thing — globally, reliably, and without compromise.
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