KX+ phone box in London s are often found in phone boxes in London advertising the services of
call girls
Wireless services The increasing use of mobile phones has led to a decreased demand for payphones, while the increasing use of laptops is leading to a new kind of service: in 2003, service provider
Verizon announced that it would begin offering wireless computer connectivity in the vicinity of its phone booths in Manhattan. In 2006, the Verizon Wi-Fi telephone booth service was discontinued in favor of the more expensive
Verizon Wireless' EVDO system. Wireless access is motivating telephone companies to place wireless stations at locations that have traditionally hosted telephone booths, but stations are also appearing in new kinds of locations such as libraries, cafés, and trains. Phone booths have been slowly disappearing with the growth in use of mobile phones.
Vandalism A rise in vandalism has prompted several companies to manufacture simpler booths with extremely durable pay phones.
Withdrawal of services Pay phones may still be used by mobile/cellular phone users if their phone becomes loses power, is stolen, or for other emergency uses. These uses may make the complete disappearance of pay phones in the near future less likely.
Australia Under the Universal Service Obligation, the
Government of Australia legally requires
Telstra to ensure standard phone services and payphones are "reasonably accessible to all people in Australia". Some communities, particularly in remote regional areas, rely on payphones, as well as people who do not have access to a mobile phone. At their peak in the early 1990s, there were more than 80,000 public phone boxes across the country. By June 30, 2016, according to the
Australian Communications & Media Authority there were about 24,000 payphones across Australia. On August 3, 2021, with 15,000 public phones remaining across Australia, Telstra announced that all calls to fixed line and mobile phones within Australia from public phones would become free of charge, and that it had no plans to further eliminate public phones.
Belgium In Belgium, majority state-owned telco
Belgacom took the last remaining phone booths out of service in June 2015.
Czech Republic In June 2021 the last phone booth in the Czech Republic was closed and dismantled.
Denmark In December 2017 the last three public telephone booths in Denmark had their telephones removed. They were situated in the town of
Aarhus.
Finland ,
Tampere, Finland in 2006 By 2007, Finnet companies and
TeliaSonera Finland had discontinued their public telephones, and the last remaining operator
Elisa Oyj did so early the same year.
France According to
Orange CEO,
Stéphane Richard, there were only 26 public phone booths still operating in
France as of 2021. The "
Macron law" of 2015 ended Orange mandatory maintenance of a public phone booth network, its decline in use being caused by the
cell phones era. These are, by law, maintained in rural area where there is no cell phone service. Consequently, they are removed once the area is properly covered by at least one
mobile phone operator. . Coins are
Francs on the labels. It also uses the
rotary dial and the 20
centimes coin, which means the device dates back to circa 1980.
Ireland Eir, the Universal Service Obligation carrier with regard to payphones, has been systematically removing payphones which fall under the minimum requirement for retention, of a rolling average of one minute of usage a day over six months. As of June 2019, 456 locations retained payphones (with none in the entirety of
County Leitrim); this was down from 1,320 in March 2014.
Italy In May 2023
AGCOM established that
TIM no longer has the obligation to guarantee the availability of telephone booths, with the exception of "places of social importance", such as hospitals (with at least ten beds), prisons, and barracks with at least fifty occupants. TIM will also be able to decommission booths in mountain refuges, while ensuring access to the mobile telephone network. AGCOM declared that 99.2% of public telephones are already covered by a mobile network with at least 2G technology (May 2023). In September 2023 over 90,000 booths which do not fall into the above-mentioned exceptions began being removed.
Jordan In 2004,
Jordan became the first country in the world not to have telephone booths generally available. The mobile/
cellular phone penetration in that country has become so high that telephone booths had been rarely used for years. The two private payphone service companies, namely ALO and JPP, closed down.
Norway The last functioning phone box in Norway was taken out of service in June 2016. However, 100 phone boxes have been preserved around the country and are protected under cultural heritage laws.
Sweden The first telephone booth in Sweden was erected in 1890. In 1981 there were 44,000, but by 2013, only 1,200 remained, with the removal of the last one in 2015. A survey showed that in 2013, only 1% of the population in Sweden had used one during the previous year.
BT is steadily removing public telephone kiosks from the streets of the UK. It is permitted to remove a kiosk without consultation provided that there is another kiosk within walking distance. In other cases, it is required to comply with
Ofcom rules in consultation with the local authority. Some decommissioned red telephone boxes have been converted for other uses with the permission of BT Group, such as housing small community libraries or
automated external defibrillators.
United States in Los Angeles. Beginning in the 1990s, many large cities began instituting restrictions on where pay phones could be placed, under the belief that they facilitated
crime. Only five percent of those remained in service by 2018. In 2015, a phone booth in
Prairie Grove, Arkansas was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places. New phone booth installations do sometimes occur, including the installation of a phone booth at
Eaton Rapid's city hall. In 2018, about a fifth of America's 100,000 remaining pay phones were in New York, according to the
FCC.
Advertising Many telephone boxes in the United Kingdom are now used for advertisements, bearing posters, with the development of "StreetTalk" by
JCDecaux. This is in addition to the
ST6 public telephone introduced in 2007 which is designed to feature a phone on one side and a JCDecaux-owned advertising space on the otherside. The advertising pays for the cost of maintaining the phone. In 2018, the UK
Local Government Association drew attention to "Trojan" telephone boxes. These are telephone boxes whose main purpose is advertising. A loophole in planning law allows these to be erected without planning permission and the LGA is seeking to close this loophole. File:Phone booth in North Carolina.jpg|Partially enclosed pay phone in North Carolina, typical of many early replacements for telephone booths in the United States, continuing an enclosed space on three sides without the booth. File:Public Phone Booth - Kashmar (5).JPG|Public telephones in
Kashmar, Iran; such structures replaced earlier booth enclosed telephones late in the 20th century File:Telephone box with internet access.JPG|Pay telephone with internet access in
Münster, Germany. March 2014, still using the old booth format but without a door. File:Telefonzelle bei der Jesuitenkirche in Luzern.jpg|Modern telephone booth in
Lucerne, Switzerland File:ManUsingPhoneBox Footscray.JPG|An example of a person using a
Telstra phone box in Victoria, Australia; used after telephone booths were phased out. File:Telstra Payphone (With Internet Access) .jpg|A
Telstra payphone booth in Australia that also serves as a Wi-Fi
hotspot to access the internet, an example of a modern pay phone that supplanted the telephone booth. File:Orelhao ctbc.JPG|Telephone kiosk in Brazil, popularly called
orelhão ("big ear") because of its shape File:London telephone booth.jpg|A decommissioned telephone booth in
Ilford, London, 2022 File:Berlin telephone booth.jpg|A decommissioned telephone booth in
Berlin, 2022 File:Public phone box in Belém (Pará) 01.jpg|Telephone kiosk in Brazil, popularly called
orelhão ("big ear") in the special form of an animal, here a parrot, in
Belém, 2001 ==See also==