US Trends

what happened to verizon

Verizon is currently dealing with a major nationwide network outage in the U.S. that is disrupting mobile voice, text, and data service for many customers, which is why so many people are asking “what happened to Verizon” right now.

What’s going on right now?

  • Tens of thousands of Verizon customers across multiple states are reporting they can’t make calls, send texts, or use mobile data.
  • Many phones are showing “SOS” or no bars instead of the usual Verizon signal, meaning they can only attempt emergency calls and not regular service.
  • Outage reports began spiking around midday Eastern time and have stayed elevated for hours, making this one of Verizon’s most significant recent disruptions.

What has Verizon said?

  • Verizon has acknowledged a “wireless voice and data” issue affecting some customers and says engineers are actively working to identify and fix the problem.
  • The company has not yet publicly given a clear cause (for example, software update, routing issue, cyber incident, or power problem) or a firm timeline for full restoration.
  • Updates so far have emphasized apologies for the inconvenience and a focus on restoring service, but details remain limited, which is fueling frustration and speculation online.

How big is the impact?

  • Outage trackers have shown reports peaking in the six‑figure range at times, far above normal background levels for a large carrier.
  • The most-affected areas include major population centers such as parts of New York, New Jersey, the Carolinas, Texas, Florida, and other regions on Verizon’s footprint.
  • People are reporting issues getting into events (mobile tickets), accessing banking apps, using rideshare, and even receiving some emergency alerts, showing how dependent daily life is on mobile connectivity.

How other carriers are involved

  • Competing carriers like AT&T and T‑Mobile have stated that their own networks are operating normally but warned that calls or texts to Verizon customers may fail because of Verizon’s outage.
  • Some are using the moment in a lightly promotional way, highlighting their “solid” networks while acknowledging that cross‑network communication is affected when one major carrier has problems.

What you can do if you’re affected

  • Use Wi‑Fi for calls and messages where possible (Wi‑Fi calling, iMessage, WhatsApp, Signal, etc.), since many home and public internet connections are not impacted.
  • If your phone shows “SOS” only, you may still be able to call local emergency services, but regular calls and data may not work until Verizon stabilizes the network.
  • Keep an eye on outage maps, news updates, and Verizon’s official social channels for confirmation when service is fully restored.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.