Verizon New Hotspot Plans Offer 5G and 4G LTE Connectivity

Verizon offers four mobile hotspot plans namely - Essential, Plus, Pro, and Premium. All of the plans are different in nature. The most basic mobile hotspot plan called ‘Essential’ offers users lowland nationwide 5G and 4G LTE connectivity.

Highlights

  • Verizon offers four mobile hotspot plans namely - Essential, Plus, Pro, and Premium
  • Essential plan offers users lowland nationwide 5G and 4G LTE connectivity
  • All of these plans have a fair usage policy (FUP) limit

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Verizon is one of the largest telecom operators in the United States (U.S.) market. The company has brought in new mobile hotspot plans for users. Now there are four options for the users to choose from. The plans start from $20, offering up to 15GB of data and range to $80 where the user gets 150GB of data. These plans offer standalone as well as unlimited plan add-on mobile hotspot data so that you can travel or work from home comfortably. Let’s take a look at all of these plans.




Verizon New Mobile Hotspot Plans

Verizon offers four mobile hotspot plans, namely - Essential, Plus, Pro, and Premium. All of the plans are different in nature. The most basic mobile hotspot plan called ‘Essential’ offers users lowland nationwide 5G and 4G LTE connectivity.

Talking about the ‘Plus’, ‘Pro’, and ‘Premium’ plans, all of them provide the users with ultra-wideband 5G that encompasses mid-band spectrum as well as mmWave spectrum to give the users both great coverage and super fast 5G speeds.

All of these plans have a fair usage policy (FUP) limit, which will force the users to consume low-speed data once the FUP limit is reached. Both the Essential and Plus plans are available to Verizon customers while the Pro and Premium plans can be added to an unlimited plan or even purchased as a standalone product.

Unlike the Indian operators, Verizon doesn’t allow its users on low-grade unlimited plans to turn on the mobile hotspot and share data to other devices. To create a mobile hotspot, users either need to switch to an expensive unlimited plan or purchase an add-on mobile hotspot plan. This is a good way for the operator to ensure that its average revenue per user (ARPU) is high if the end-user is trying to go for a mobile hotspot. Fortunately, the Indian operators are more lenient than this.

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