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Breaking Down Yesterday’s Massive Verizon Outage

If you found yourself staring at a dreaded “SOS” icon on your phone or frantically toggling airplane mode yesterday, you certainly weren’t alone. Wednesday, January 14, 2026, turned into a digital blackout for millions of Americans as Verizon suffered one of its most significant network disruptions in recent memory. Now that the dust has settled and the signal bars have returned, here is a look at exactly what happened, why it happened, and what the carrier is doing to make it right.

The Timeline of the Blackout

The trouble began right around lunchtime, specifically 12:30 PM ET. Reports immediately flooded in from across the country, with the outage hitting major population centers on the Eastern Seaboard and the Midwest particularly hard. At the height of the disruption, outage tracking sites logged over 1.5 million complaints. For roughly 10 hours, subscribers were cut off from data and voice services, leaving devices stuck in “SOS mode”—meaning they could function only to call 911 via other available carrier networks.

The Culprit: Glitch, Not Attack

Naturally, when a network of this magnitude goes dark, fears of foul play or security breaches arise. However, Verizon has explicitly stated that there was no indication of a cyberattack. The company identified the root cause as a widespread software issue within their network systems. Ultimately, it was an internal technical failure rather than an external threat that brought the network to a standstill.

Resolution and Getting Back Online

Engineering teams worked throughout the afternoon and evening to patch the software fault. Verizon officially declared the issue resolved at 10:15 PM ET last night. By late evening, the vast majority of devices had reconnected. For anyone still experiencing lingering connectivity issues today, the carrier advises a simple restart of your device. Powering your phone off and back on should force it to re-establish a fresh connection with the nearest cell towers.

Compensation for the Trouble

In response to the frustration caused by the day-long silence, Verizon has announced it is offering a $20 account credit to affected customers. The company noted that this amount is intended to cover multiple days of service. While consumer accounts are being handled largely through this flat credit, Verizon has stated that business customers will be contacted directly regarding compensation for their specific accounts.

It was a frustrating Wednesday for millions, but operations have returned to normal. Hopefully, the $20 credit will help smooth over the inconvenience of a day spent offline.


About My Gear Fit Watch

My Watch
Gear Fit has a customizable watch face.

My watch is a Samsung Gear Fit. It connects to just about any Samsung Galaxy phone. It’s a great fitness tracker with pedometer, running, walking and biking modes. It also has a heart rate sensor. Available from Verizon, Best Buy and Amazon.com. You can even purchase different color bands.

Continue reading About My Gear Fit Watch

T-Mobile campaign against Verizon totally backfired


Verizon and T-Mobile signs

When it comes to taking shots at its larger rivals, T-Mobile never settles.

Source: T-Mobile’s $200,000 campaign against Verizon’s #NeverSettle totally backfired

I would say this is a #TotalFail for @TMobile. Proud to work for @VerizonWireless!

Super Bowl Network Stats

Verizon Customers at Super Bowl XLIX Rack Up More than 25 Million Wireless Data Connections http://troms.me/702

Total of 4.1 terabytes of data more than doubles last year’s Big Game usage

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Click image for full size…

Running Accomplishment

Verizon Wireless likes to recognize all kinds of accomplishments by their employees. My latest award is from the Verizon Wireless Street Team.

Street Team Certificate

  • 15 Miles so far this Year
    Slow start because the weather has been so cold
  • 745 Miles Lifetime
  • I actually ran 10 Official races last year
    These two races were in October and November