Private Network Check Readiness - TeckNexus Solutions

T-Mobile’s 5G Network Attracts Customers in Q1 2023

T-Mobile's Q1 2023 growth is attributed to its 5G network, value proposition, and customer experience, with the company outperforming its main rivals in postpaid phone net additions and high-speed fixed wireless access.
T-Mobile's 5G Network Attracts Customers in Q1 2023
Image Credit: T-Mobile

T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert attributed the company’s Q1 growth to its 5G network, value proposition, and customer experience, stating that customers are staying for these reasons. During the Q1 earnings call on Thursday, Sievert also acknowledged that T-Mobile’s churn is not the best in the industry but could be improved.


The company reported 538,000 postpaid phone net additions in Q1 2023, surpassing its two main competitors. Additionally, T-Mobile claimed 523,000 net customer additions for its high-speed fixed wireless access (FWA) internet service, outperforming AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, and Charter combined. The company’s service revenues reached $15.5 billion, a 3% YoY growth, including a 6% YoY growth in postpaid service revenue. Net income amounted to $1.9 billion.

T-Mobile’s Q1 postpaid phone churn was 0.89%, slightly better than Verizon’s 0.90% but not as good as AT&T’s 0.81%. Sievert reflected on T-Mobile’s history, emphasizing the company’s progress in recent years, from last place in the LTE era to first place in the 5G era. T-Mobile now aims to convince the American public of its network superiority and expand its market share in the business customer segment.

Regarding FWA high-speed internet, Sievert reiterated the company’s plan to reach 7-8 million customers by 2025, primarily by selling excess capacity on its mobile network. T-Mobile President of Technology Ulf Ewaldsson praised the 2.5 GHz spectrum for its excess capacity, with plans to increase coverage from 275 million POPs to 300 million by year-end.

T-Mobile Business Group President Callie Field reported significant progress in doubling market share in the business segment, citing growth in customers, revenue, and market share taken from AT&T and Verizon.


Recent Content

Beijing’s first World Humanoid Robot Games is more than a spectacle. It is a live systems trial for embodied AI, connectivity, and edge operations at scale. Over three days at the Beijing National Speed Skating Oval, more than 500 humanoid robots from roughly 280 teams representing 16 countries are competing in 26 events that span athletics and applied tasks, from soccer and boxing to medicine sorting and venue cleanup. The games double as a staging ground for 5G-Advanced (5G-A) capabilities designed for uplink-intensive, low-latency, high-reliability robotics traffic. Indoors, a digital system with 300 MHz of spectrum delivers multi-Gbps peaks and sustains uplink above 100 Mbps.
stc 5G powered the Esports World Cup with 1,295 antennas and 285 MHz spectrum, delivering broadcast-grade uplink, low latency, and reliable performance.
More than $14 billion has been invested across the CBRS stacklicenses, RAN, devices, infrastructure, sensors, and software. Over 420,000 CBRS radio nodes (CBSDs) are in service. The device ecosystem is broad: Apple and Samsung ship n48-capable handsets; industrial and FWA suppliers support n48 CPEs and routers; Ericsson, Nokia, Samsung, JMA Wireless and others provide radio and DAS. This is not a pilot; it is production infrastructure. Refarming would force replacement or retuning of hundreds of thousands of base stations and millions of end devices, plus upgrades to SAS integrations and enterprise control planes.
OneLayer is expanding into Latin America to address growing demand for private 5G and LTE security solutions. With successful deployments in mining and utilities, the company brings its expertise in Zero Trust, network orchestration, and cellular device visibility to regional markets like Brazil and Chile.
Lufthansa Industry Solutions and Ericsson are tackling logistics bottlenecks with private 5G. At the LAX warehouse, they replaced unreliable Wi-Fi with just two private 5G radios, reducing scanning delays by 97% and eliminating paper logs. With edge computing and AI-powered inspections, their scalable solution is setting a new standard for warehouse automation and logistics connectivity.
An unsolicited offer from Perplexity to acquire Googles Chrome raises immediate questions about antitrust remedies, AI distribution, and who controls the internets primary access point. Perplexity has proposed a $34.5 billion cash acquisition of Chrome and says backers are lined up to fund the deal despite the startups significantly smaller balance sheet and an estimated $18 billion valuation in recent fundraising. The bid includes commitments to keep Chromium open source, invest an additional $3 billion in the codebase, and preserve current user defaults including leaving Google as the default search engine. The timing aligns with a U.S. Department of Justice push for structural remedies after a court found Google maintained an illegal search monopoly, with a Chrome divestiture floated as a central remedy.
Whitepaper
Explore RADCOM's whitepaper 'Unleashing the Power of 5G Analytics' to understand how telecom operators can drive cost savings and revenue with 5G. Learn about NWDAF's role in network efficiency, innovative use cases, and analytics monetization strategies. Download now for key insights into optimizing 5G network performance....
Radcom Logo

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

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Private Network Awards 2025 - TeckNexus
Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025