According to CNET, Verizon has launched a new Home Internet Lite plan that costs just $25 per month for three years, potentially saving customers over $1,200 compared to their standard $60 monthly plan. The service targets people with limited connectivity options or those seeking low-cost internet, and some customers can get it for as low as $20 monthly through the Verizon Forward program for those on federal assistance. The plan delivers internet via Verizon’s cellular network with download speeds up to 25Mbps, but that drops to just 10Mbps maximum after you’ve used 150GB of data in a month. For comparison, streaming ultra-high-definition video for one hour can use up to 10GB of data on a 5G network.
The speed trap
Here’s the thing about that 25Mbps speed cap – it’s barely enough for modern internet use. We’re talking one person browsing and streaming at a time, maybe. And that 150GB data cap? That’s incredibly low. Basically, if you stream about 15 hours of 4K content in a month, you’re already hitting your limit and getting throttled to 10Mbps. At that point, you might as well be back on DSL.
How it compares
Now let’s look at the competition. Mint Mobile offers up to 415Mbps until you hit 1TB of data for $30 monthly if you have their phone plan. T-Mobile gives you the same 415Mbps speed with a 1.2TB cap for $30 (normally $55). So you’re paying $5 less than Verizon’s plan but getting 16 times the speed and nearly 7 times the data before slowdowns. That’s a massive difference.
Who this actually works for
I think Verizon knows exactly what they’re doing here. This isn’t meant to be your primary household internet. It’s for people who literally have no other options – rural areas stuck with satellite or ancient DSL lines. Or maybe for a secondary location like a vacation home. The Verizon Forward program making it $20 for low-income households is genuinely helpful, but even then, is slow internet better than no internet? That’s the real question.
The fine print
Don’t get me wrong – any additional competition in the home internet space is good. And locking in $25 for three years is pretty solid in an era where prices only go up. But let’s be real: this feels like Verizon’s way of capturing customers who can’t get their premium Fios service. They’re giving you just enough internet to get by, but not enough to actually thrive online. So is it worth it? If you’re truly desperate for any connection and your usage is minimal, maybe. But for most people, those competitor plans at $30 look like much better value.

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