Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

T-Mobile’s 5G network just beat Verizon and AT&T (again)

Add as a preferred source on Google

T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T always claim to be America’s best 5G network in their commercials. T-Mobile boasts this even more so, and as it turns out, it’s true. During PCMag’s annual Best Mobile Network test (previously known as the Fastest Mobile Network test), T-Mobile won over Verizon and AT&T as the Best Mobile Network for the second year in a row.

PCMag gave T-Mobile the title after testers drove 10,000 miles across the country to measure its performance against Verizon and AT&T. The test involved driving to 30 cities and six rural regions to test each mobile carrier’s reliability using Samsung Galaxy S22+ smartphones. As expected, T-Mobile won that contest in 18 cities out of 30, followed by Verizon with eight and AT&T with four.

T-Mobile smartphone.
Jaap Arriens / Getty Images

T-Mobile also outran its rivals in terms of speed, specifically upload and download speeds, backing up its slogan of being “America’s fastest 5G network.” The carrier was the fastest in 19 cities out of 30, compared to Verizon with nine and AT&T with two. PCMag’s report noted that T-Mobile is performing better in rural areas, but explained that it still has more rural dead zones in the Northeast than Verizon and AT&T do.

Recommended Videos

The reason T-Mobile left Verizon and AT&T in the dust is because of mid-band 5G — something that carrier built from Sprint’s airwaves after acquiring the company for $26 billion in 2020. That’s how T-Mobile was able to gain coverage in rural dead zones in the Northeast, despite falling short in the rural areas of the Northwest, Washington State, and Georgia.

Meanwhile, Verizon, and AT&T are rushing to close the gap between themselves and T-Mobile using mid-band 5G acquired at an auction in February 2021. While Verizon started running its 5G network right away, AT&T has been waiting for the equipment required to build it. The latter carrier hopes to have a 5G network up and running by next year.

Cristina Alexander
Gaming/Mobile Writer
Cristina Alexander is a gaming and mobile writer at Digital Trends. She blends fair coverage of games industry topics that…
Android 17’s new video standard fixes one of HDR’s biggest problems
Your HDR videos are about to look right, no matter what screen you use.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Android 17 is packed with new features, but one small addition might end up mattering more than the flashy ones. It's called Eclipsa Video, and its whole purpose boils down to this: your HDR videos should finally look the way they're supposed to, regardless of which screen you're staring at.

Why does HDR look different on every screen?

Read more
Your free mobile VPN is a privacy disaster. Go figure
Android's free VPNs are somehow worse than you expected
VPN

The free VPN app you downloaded for your Android phone might be doing more harm than good. A recent large-scale audit of free Android VPN apps has shared some worrisome findings that justify some healthy suspicion. Researchers found these apps leaking traffic, sending identifying information to third parties, and basically the opposite of what a VPN is supposed to do.

The study comes from researchers at the University of Michigan, the University of New Mexico and IIT Delhi. Their findings were presented at the Network and Distributed System Security Symposium 2026 alongside MVPNalyzer, a framework designed to audit mobile VPN apps automatically and at scale.

Read more
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 just became the Pixel desktop future I want Google to steal
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 became a tiny PC because Samsung already built the desktop mode Google keeps treating like a side quest.
Desktop mode within Android 16.

A broken Galaxy Fold 5 should be a sad little monument to modern gadget math. One busted outer display, one repair bill nobody wants to inspect too closely, and suddenly a powerful foldable starts heading toward a drawer. Instead, a Redditor turned one into a glowing acrylic DeX box with spare parts, fans, a USB hub, and the kind of LED lighting that makes every homebrew computer look mildly illegal.

https://www.reddit.com/r/SamsungDex/comments/1upica7/fold_5_dexbox/

Read more