Telstra has completed 395 welfare checks triggered by customers that could not connect to emergency services during a major mobile network outage on Wednesday.
More welfare checks may need to be carried out as well, with the telco reporting a “secondary issue” late last night that impacted calls to triple zero.
The telco’s chief financial officer Michael Ackland had earlier said that triple zero calls “follow different settings in our network” to other voice and data services, which shielded them from the worst of the problems on Wednesday.
Still, Telstra said it had to perform 395 welfare checks as of 5.30pm on Wednesday, which it said was unexpectedly high.
Of these, 310 callers did not need assistance. Of the remaining callers, 79 were referred to a state or territory policing agency for a physical welfare check, and six callers indicated they still required emergency assistance.
Telstra said the high number of calls requiring investigation was due to a variety of reasons.
“In some cases, a phone wasn't able to connect correctly on its first call attempt, which triggered a callback from us,” the telco said.
“In other cases, the call was picked up by the TPG or Optus networks and connected successfully.”
The telco also said the number of welfare checks was “inflated by a larger number of people calling to test triple zero, and as a flow-on from the core issue.”
That “flow-on” appeared to be a reference to a “secondary” issue that materialised late Wednesday, and impacted emergency calls.
“In these cases, when you call triple zero you will receive an error message and your phone will try to connect to an alternative mobile network,” Telstra said.
“As part of our back up process, we will complete a welfare check where we detect a failed triple zero call.”
Telstra said that it could take “up to 90 seconds” for an emergency call to be re-routed over another telco’s network under a process called ‘camp-on’, which is designed to prevent emergency calls from being dropped during an outage by one network operator.
Rival Optus has previously said the delay to route an emergency call over healthy mobile infrastructure near the caller can be up to a minute long, with the user greeted by silence.

iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast
Forrester's AI Forum Sydney
The 2026 iAwards
Security Exhibition & Conference
Integrate 2026



