Red52 brings together two decades of Latin American network operations, satellite, fiber, and the cross-border infrastructure in between, under one roof in Dallas. We exist to make connectivity across the region fast to provision, honest to price, and dependable when it matters.
Red52 started from a simple frustration: connectivity in Latin America was too slow to provision, too opaque to price, and too often dependent on incumbents who treated "six weeks" as a fact of life.
Our roots run deep in the region. For nearly two decades, the networks behind Red52 have carried connectivity into the places fiber doesn't reach: remote mining operations, rural communities, disaster-struck regions, over satellite and microwave. Since 2011, those same operations have delivered carrier-grade circuits for Tier-1 US carriers extending into Mexico.
Today, headquartered in Dallas and operating across Mexico, Central America, South America, and the Caribbean, Red52 brings those capabilities together under one company. More than 25,000 kilometers of fiber through our network partners, multi-satellite reach, redundant cross-border infrastructure into the United States, and a 24/7 bilingual NOC. One MSA, one accountable team, one network that reaches everywhere our customers need to go.
Whether it delivers what it promised, on the date it promised.
Everything we've built comes back to that. Transparent pricing, because you shouldn't need a sales cycle to find out if we fit your budget. Thirty-day cross-border delivery, because your end customer's deadline is real. An engineering team you can reach directly, because the person who answers the phone should be the person who can fix the problem. We don't think any of that is remarkable. We think it should be the standard, and we're building the company that proves it.
The person who answers your call can read the config, run the trace, and make the change. No triage lottery, no tier-to-tier handoffs between the alert and the fix.
We publish route latencies and interconnection points up front. The details your engineers ask for first, before your sourcing team picks up the phone.
Most cross-border carrier deliveries land in 30 to 45 days, not six weeks. Quotes for standard routes come back in three business days. Speed is a feature, not a favor.
Two decades operating across Latin America's most demanding markets, from metro fiber in the industrial corridors to satellite links at remote sites fiber will never reach.
Whether you're a carrier extending into Mexico, a hyperscaler scaling regional capacity, or an enterprise consolidating connectivity, the conversation starts the same way: tell us what you need, and we'll tell you exactly how we'd deliver it.