No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsCosta RicaWhatsApp: An indispensable utility for Costa Ricans

WhatsApp: An indispensable utility for Costa Ricans

If American runs on Dunkin’, Costa Rica runs on WhatsApp (and also coffee).

And for most of Monday, Ticos had to live without an indispensable part of their daily lives when all of Facebook’s services, including WhatsApp and Instagram, went offline. 

This was a worldwide outage but one that impacted Costa Rica more than, say, the United States. In Costa Rica, more than 95% of smartphone owners use WhatsApp. 

For Costa Ricans, WhatsApp has replaced text messaging and phone calls because it’s easy-to-use and multi-platform. (Most cell phone providers even offer WhatsApp for free but charge for “regular” calls and texts.) 

It’s also crucial for official business: Banks have WhatsApp customer-support numbers; the Judicial Investigation Police collects tips via WhatsApp; the Presidential House communicates with press via WhatsApp. 

During several hours on Monday, all of that came to an unexpected halt. Costa Rica survived of course — we could all use a little more time offline, right? — but it served as an uncomfortable reminder of how pervasive WhatsApp is in the country’s daily functions.

WhatsApp’s parent company, Facebook, has itself been Costa Rica’s most popular social network for more than a decadeTwo-thirds of Costa Ricans are active Facebook users; the platform is used as the preferred method of communication by most municipalities and even for the country’s national Covid updates. 

As for Instagram, also a Facebook property … well, there are probably plenty of Costa Rican influencers who couldn’t influence quite as much on Monday. 

All this to say: Costa Rica relies heavily on a single foreign company — Facebook — for so much of its day-to-day life. The consequences of that were evident Monday. 

Trending Now

Costa Rica’s Bold Plan to End Plastic Pollution by 2040

On World Environment Day, UN Secretary-General António Guterres called for action to tackle plastic pollution, a crisis clogging rivers, oceans, and wildlife worldwide. “By...

Salvadoran Journalist Killed in Honduras Despite Protection

Salvadoran journalist Javier Antonio Hércules Salinas was shot and killed in Santa Rosa de Copán, Honduras, about 200 km northwest of Tegucigalpa. Gunmen ambushed...

Costa Rica’s Pavones Resists Demolitions to Protect Its Legacy

Pavones, a small surfing paradise in Golfito, Costa Rica, faces a growing battle to protect its iconic wave, local community, and fragile ecosystem. Known...

Costa Rican Fishermen Sound Alarm on Gulf of Nicoya’s Overfishing Crisis

In Costa Rica’s Gulf of Nicoya, fishermen are raising urgent concerns about a growing crisis threatening their livelihoods and the region’s marine ecosystems. Illegal...

Panama-Costa Rica Railway Set for 2026 Construction Start

Panama will break ground in January 2026 on a railway linking Panama City to Paso Canoas on the Costa Rica border. This 475-kilometer, $4.1-$5...

Costa Rica’s Gandoca-Manzanillo Faces Unregulated Real Estate Boom

Costa Rica’s Gandoca-Manzanillo National Wildlife Refuge, a biodiverse gem on our southern Caribbean coast, is under siege from unregulated development and government inaction. Environmental...
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica