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

T-Mobile’s Home Office Internet service brings 5G to businesses nationwide

Add as a preferred source on Google

T-Mobile is getting more serious about internet services beyond phones — and it’s all on the back of its nationwide 5G network. The company has announced a new wireless Home Office Internet service, and it’s built specifically to “give remote employees the bandwidth and security needed to get work done.”

The new product is one of three services that are bundled into what T-Mobile calls “T-Mobile WFX” and is for enterprise customers — so it’s not necessarily for those looking for a replacement to their wired home internet service just yet. People who sign up for the service will get a router that they can install themselves and that basically converts 5G or LTE signals to Wi-Fi for the surrounding area.

Recommended Videos

Related Reading:

“The pandemic pushed the fast forward button on the future of work, giving us a decade’s worth of progress in a year’s time. And it’s clear that work will never be the same,” said T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert in a statement. “Tomorrow’s workplace won’t be anything like the old work from office (WFO) world, and it won’t be like today’s work from home (WFH) world. It’ll be something new: the work from anywhere (WFX) world.”

Alongside Home Office Internet, the T-Mobile WFX bundle also includes T-Mobile Enterprise Unlimited and T-Mobile Collaborate, which is basically a set of mobile-based tools for things like messaging, videoconferencing, and typical enterprise collaboration.

There is some fine print to note with the new Home Office Internet service. Notably, when the network is busy, users could see slowed download speeds — which is probably not something you want during an important group video call or presentation. That said, T-Mobile’s 5G network is getting better and faster all the time, and that’s likely to continue.

T-Mobile Home Office Internet will be available for enterprise users starting on March 22, and T-Mobile says that a hefty 60 million households will be covered by it initially, with the goal to expand that to 90 million by 2025. Thankfully for T-Mobile, most who will be interested in an enterprise 5G network setup like this will already be in the dense urban areas where it has the best coverage and speeds.

Of course, the Home Office Internet service is likely the beginning of a bigger push by T-Mobile into consumer home internet. T-Mobile is piloting an actual home internet service, based on 5G and LTE, that users can sign up for right now. That service, however, is very limited in scope, and only a few select areas have access to it for now. Assuming T-Mobile WFX goes according to plan, the consumer side will likely follow in short order.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
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