T‑Mobile Lights Up Standalone Ultra Capacity 5G Nationwide 

T-Mobile has taken its 5G standalone (5G SA) network to the next level, lighting up mid-band Ultra Capacity spectrum on 5G SA nationwide. 5G SA is the future of wireless connectivity, immediately improving performance and paving the way for groundbreaking applications that leverage super-fast speeds, ultra-reliable low latency (real-time responsiveness), massive connectivity, and more.

T-Mobile announced it has taken the country’s only nationwide 5G standalone (5G SA) network to the next level, lighting up Ultra Capacity 5G on 5G SA nationwide. The move immediately advances T-Mobile’s network – unleashing faster speeds for customers across the country while further reducing any lag in the network with lower latency, improving applications like gaming that require near real-time responsiveness. And it’s another massive step toward unleashing groundbreaking new applications that will thrive on a pure 5G network.

“5G is making a meaningful impact today – changing the way people use their smartphones, bringing choice and competition to home broadband, improving disaster response and so much more … but we’re only scratching the surface on what 5G can do,” said Neville Ray, President of Technology at T-Mobile. “Transformative 5G networks are here, and T-Mobile is leading the charge with not just the largest, fastest and most reliable 5G network, but the most advanced as well. We’re driving the industry forward with 5G standalone and delivering a level of performance for customers that can’t be achieved otherwise.”

New Technology. New Capacity.


With the move to 5G SA on its Ultra Capacity network, T-Mobile is opening up new possibilities for 5G carrier aggregation (NR CA) – which means combining different layers of 5G spectrum together for greater speed and capacity. This year the Un-carrier will begin combining three channels of Ultra Capacity 5G, which in tests produced peak speeds topping 3 Gbps (mind-blowingly fast). Customers with the Samsung Galaxy S22 will be the first to leverage this new capability in the coming weeks, and it will expand to additional devices in the near future.

T-Mobile is the network leader, delivering a 5G network that is larger, faster, and more reliable than any other in the US. The Un-carrier’s Extended Range 5G now covers 321 million people across 1.9 million square miles – more than AT&T and Verizon combined. 250 million people nationwide are covered by T-Mobile’s super-fast Ultra Capacity 5G, and the Un-carrier plans to reach 300 million people with Ultra Capacity next year.

For more information on T-Mobile’s 5G network, visit: https://www.t-mobile.com/coverage/4g-lte-5g-networks.


Recent Content

At the ETTelecom 5G Congress 2025, top Indian telecom players shared strategies for 5G growth, AI integration, and future tech like 6G. Bharti Airtel emphasized Fixed Wireless Access (FWA), Jio highlighted AI and its 6G roadmap, while Vodafone Idea focused on delivering high-quality 5G user experiences. With 84% population 5G coverage and India targeting 1 billion users by 2030, the telecom industry is at a pivotal moment.
U.S. fixed wireless access (FWA) is on the rise, with over 11.5 million subscribers across T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T. Ookla Speedtest data reveals rising download speeds, with T-Mobile leading at 205 Mbps. Verizon manages performance via speed caps, while AT&T positions FWA as a transitional service. Latency and upload improvements further boost FWA’s appeal in 2024.
Telecom providers have spent over $300 billion since 2018 on 5G, fiber, and cloud-based infrastructure—but returns are shrinking. The missing link? Network observability. Without real-time visibility, telecoms can’t optimize performance, preempt outages, or respond to security threats effectively. This article explores why observability must become a core priority for both operators and regulators, especially as networks grow more dynamic, virtualized, and AI-driven.
As Open RAN moves from trials to large-scale adoption, telecom giants like NTT Docomo, AT&T, and TELUS share their real-world deployment strategies. From multivendor interoperability to automation and security, this article explores key operational insights, ecosystem collaborations, and future directions in Open RAN architecture.
5G and AI are transforming industries, but this convergence also brings complex security challenges. This article explores how Secure Access Service Edge (SASE), zero trust models, and solutions like Prisma SASE 5G are safeguarding enterprise networks. With real-world examples from telecom and manufacturing, learn how to secure 5G infrastructure for long-term digital success.
Connectivity convergence is redefining the Internet of Things by integrating legacy systems, cellular, Wi-Fi, LoRaWAN, BLE, and satellite networks. From agriculture to logistics, IoT ecosystems are evolving to prioritize seamless communication, modular hardware, and intelligent data handling with edge AI. This article explores how convergence is shifting the focus from hype to practical, scalable deployment—unlocking the true potential of IoT everywhere.
Whitepaper
Dive deep into how Radisys Corporation is navigating the dynamic landscape of Open RAN and 5G technologies. With their innovative strategies, they are making monumental strides in advancing the deployment and implementation of scalable, flexible, and efficient solutions. Get insights into how they're leveraging small cells, private networks, and strategic...
Whitepaper
This whitepaper explores seven compelling use cases of AI-infused automated service assurance solutions, encompassing anomaly detection, automated root cause analysis, service quality enhancement, customer experience improvement, network capacity planning, network monetization, and self-healing networks. Each use case explains how AI, when embedded in a tailored assurance solution powered by extensive...
Radcom Logo

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top