Is T-Mobile shutting down HSPA+?

T-Mobile shutting off HSPA+ service on its AWS spectrum market by market. T-Mobile US (NYSE:TMUS) is in the process of shutting down HSPA+/UMTS service on its 1700 MHz AWS-1 spectrum as it completes the transition to supporting those services on its 1900 MHz PCS spectrum.

What megahertz does T-Mobile run on?

T-Mobile has fresh 600 MHz spectrum dedicated to 5G. Only the Un-carrier is capable of delivering nationwide 5G without taking spectrum away from other customers.

What frequency does T-Mobile 4G use?

4G LTE. Frequencies that can provide LTE: Band 2 (1900 MHz) Band 5 (850 MHz)

Which T-Mobile band is fastest?

band 4
What LTE bands does T-Mobile use? Finally, T-Mobile has been the loudest and arguably the fastest growing 4G LTE network, especially in the big cities. Currently, T-Mobile’s main band is still band 4 (AWS) in the 1700 MHz range.

Is HSPA going away?

Hspa/hspa+ goes away. Phones must be LTE and voice over LTE compliant with AT. If you don’t see VoLTE in your notification bar, or it drops to h+ when your on a call, your phone will no longer work on AT.

Is T-Mobile doing away with 4G?

T-Mobile announced that it will finish shutting down Sprint’s 3G CDMA network by March 31, 2022 and Sprint’s 4G LTE network by June 30, 2022.

What band does T-Mobile use for internet?

T-Mobile is using the following bands for Home Internet: LTE bands 2 (1900 MHz), 4 (1700/2100 MHz), 12 (700 MHz), 66 (1700/2100 MHz) and 71 (600 MHz), as well as 5G New Radio (NR) bands 41 (2.5 GHz) and 71 (600 MHz).

Which T-Mobile band is best?

T-Mobile won our Fastest Mobile Network award this year thanks to its speedy mid-band 5G network, which now covers more than 185 million people. Now, the carrier is making two big moves over the next year to expand coverage and bandwidth.

What band is T-Mobile 4G LTE?

T-Mobile’s 4G LTE network uses bands 4/66 (AWS), 12, 2 (PCS), and 71 (600 mHz). The 4G network acquired from Sprint uses bands 25, 26, and 41. For 5G, T-Mobile is using band 71 (600 MHz) for low-band, band 41 (2,500 Mhz) for mid-band, as well as faster mmWave in select downtown areas.