13 November 2025

This year’s Freedom on the Net report finds that internet freedom in Myanmar remained one of the worst in the world, alongside China, with a score of 9 points out of 100. The military’s installation of advanced deep packet inspection technology and the resulting VPN block significantly worsened the situation, shifting the country from basic to advanced digital repression. This report, published by Freedom House in partnership with HRM, alongside a hundred other national reports, uses 21 indicators to measure and compare internet freedom.
Myanmar remained one of the world’s worst environments for internet freedom, with a score of 9 out of 100 points.
The military, which seized control of the state in a 2021 coup, continued to impose localized internet shutdowns, manipulate online information, and imprison people for their online expression of dissent amid an ongoing civil war between the military regime and its armed opponents. The military’s direct and indirect control over all major service providers enabled mass censorship and surveillance, including broad limits on social media platforms and anticensorship tools.
Read the full global report on Freedom House’s website >
Military commanders seized control of Myanmar’s government in February 2021, ending a period of power sharing between military and civilian leaders under a 2008 constitution that had been drafted by a previous junta. Since the coup, the military has violently suppressed peaceful civic dissent and battled a sizable armed resistance movement that has widespread popular support and includes various armed ethnic minority groups. The National League for Democracy (NLD), which led the civilian government before the coup and won a sweeping victory in the November 2020 elections, serves as the political backbone of a National Unity Government (NUG). Armed ethnic groups and resistance groups with ties to the NUG exercise partial or effective control over a growing swathe of territory. Millions of people remain displaced or have been newly displaced by the ongoing civil war, with many seeking refuge abroad.
This report has been abridged for Freedom on the Net 2025 due to ongoing budget constraints. The U.S. administration’s decision in 2025 to cut development aid also affected this project, resulting in a reduced report. For additional background information, see last year’s full report on Freedom House’s website.
19 May 2026