Verizon “nationwide” 5G ready for iPhone 12—don’t expect a big speed boost

Verizon 5G available in 1,800 cities, should be marginally faster than 4G. …

Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg speaking on stage in front of a coverage map.

Enlarge / Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg at Apple’s iPhone 12 event.

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Verizon today announced “nationwide” 5G coverage along with support for the new 5G-enabled iPhones. But for most consumers, Verizon’s 5G upgrade won’t make much of a difference.

The newly enabled 5G runs on the same spectrum bands used by Verizon for 4G, so it won’t be nearly as fast as Verizon’s millimeter-wave version of 5G. Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg said in May that 5G users on the non-millimeter-wave bands will see only a “small” upgrade at first.

“Nationwide” doesn’t mean it’s available everywhere, either. As Verizon said in its announcement today, nationwide means that Verizon 5G “is available today to more than 200 million people in 1,800 cities around the US.” That definition satisfies a standard set by the National Advertising Division, which is the advertising industry’s self-regulatory body. NAD says that, in general, “a wireless network can claim to be nationwide or coast to coast if the provider offers service in diverse regions of the country and the network covers at least 200 million people.”

The standard is over 15 years old and hasn’t been updated for increases in US population. Under the 200 million-person standard, carriers can advertise nationwide coverage if their networks reach about 60.5 percent of the country’s 330.4 million residents.

Verizon’s updated coverage map shows availability of 5G in and around many populated areas, with most of the country’s land mass still covered by 4G but not 5G:

<a href="https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/verizon-5g-map.jpg" class="enlarge" data-height="858"

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