×

FCC approves Verizon’s $1 billion spectrum purchase

By Thomson Reuters May 14, 2026 | 12:30 PM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, May 14 (Reuters) – The Federal Communications Commission said on Thursday it has approved Verizon’s 2024 $1 billion deal to acquire some spectrum assets ​from U.S. Cellular to expand its network capacity and ‌coverage.

Last year, after T-Mobile acquired most of U.S. Cellular’s wireless operations and 30% of its wireless spectrum in a $4.4 billion deal, the remainder of the company changed its name to Array Digital Infrastructure.

The ‌FCC ​said the deal it approved on ⁠Thursday will enhance Verizon ⁠Wireless’ “network coverage, capacity and performance, resulting in a stronger ability to meet increasing customer demand and provide a better customer experience.”

Kathy Grillo, Verizon’s public policy and government affairs ​senior vice president, welcomed the FCC’s approval, saying “the additional spectrum will allow us to better serve our customers ⁠as we continue to bolster our ⁠already-robust network.”

The FCC has been moving to ​approve a number of spectrum transactions even as it prepares ​to auction additional wireless spectrum to address the rising ‌demand among U.S. consumers and businesses.

“Scale matters a lot in today’s modern connectivity market, and the spectrum is going in the hands of players that are lighting it up, ⁠immediately, loading it up, using it to bridge the digital divide,” FCC Chairman Brendan Carr told Reuters in an interview this ⁠week. “We’re facilitating as ‌many transactions and auctions as we can ⁠do to help make that happen.”

On Tuesday, ​the ‌FCC approved EchoStar’s $40 billion sale of wireless ​spectrum to ⁠SpaceX and AT&T.

SpaceX is gaining access to exclusive-use spectrum for a Starlink device-to-device service and other offerings. The FCC said AT&T’s low-band spectrum will expand coverage across the United States, especially in rural and underserved areas.

(Reporting by David Shepardson, Editing ​by Franklin Paul)