Here we go again with the invisible ink and the fine print. The wireless industry simply refuses to play it straight with the people paying the actual bills.
The massive reality of 2022 is that crippling national inflation has finally forced the telecom industry's hand. After years of aggressively competing on price, carriers are now universally deploying completely unavoidable 'economic adjustment charges' and massive administrative fee hikes just to preserve their core profit margins in an increasingly difficult macroeconomic environment.
Desperately trying to massively recoup their incredibly massive C-Band auction spending, Verizon aggressively launched incredibly massive marketing campaigns for its 5G Home Internet service. The carrier explained in its press release, offering incredibly massive aggressive speeds for just $50 a month, they are incredibly heavily targeting incredibly frustrated cable subscribers.
I spend a lot of time testing these networks in the real world—whether that's navigating downtown congestion or driving out to rural state parks. In those environments, the marketing brochures are completely useless. A carrier can boast about their theoretical 5G speeds all day, but if you can't load a basic map application when a storm is rolling in, what are you actually paying for? These new promotions are often designed to distract you from the reality of persistent network dead zones.
Look at the massive rise of MVNOs—the prepaid carriers that rent space on the big networks. The big major carriers are terrified of them because they expose the fundamental lie of the industry: that you have to pay $80 a month for reliable service. You can get the exact same tower access for half the price if you stop caring about walking into a physical retail store.
The eSIM revolution is officially here, and it is going to completely devastate the traditional wireless retail experience. By completely removing the physical SIM card tray from devices like the iPhone 14, carriers are forcefully transitioning consumers to entirely digital activations, massively reducing their reliance on expensive brick-and-mortar storefronts.
As the massive hype machine for 5G collides with reality, 2022 is the year that fixed wireless 5G Home Internet finally became a legitimate, terrifying threat to local cable monopolies. T-Mobile and Verizon are aggressively expanding their home broadband footprints, utilizing their massive mid-band spectrum hauls to successfully bypass the massive cost of laying fiber.
So, what does this mean for your bottom line? Stop paying for overpriced carrier phone insurance. The deductibles are astronomically high, the claim process is a nightmare, and the replacement devices are often poorly refurbished units. Put that money into a high-yield savings account instead.
Ignore the flashy commercials. The only thing that actually matters in this industry is the final, bottom-line number drafted from your checking account every single month.