Study: Americans Are Ditching Home Internet for Mobile

By Andrew Dalton | Apr 20, 2016
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According to from the U.S. Census Bureau, more and more American households across a range of incomes are relying on mobile Internet service as their sole means for getting online. In fact, mobile Internet service has reached the point where it now “appears to be competing more directly with wired Internet connections,” writes Giulia McHenry, chief economist of the Office of Policy Analysis and Development.

The data, collected from nearly 53,000 households, shows that three-quarters of American households with Internet are using a DSL, cable or fiber connection to get online at home. While that is still a vast majority, it’s a significant drop from 82 percent in 2013. On the flip side: the proportion of homes that only used a mobile Internet connection went from 10 to 20 percent in the same period. As the Washington Post , roughly one in five online households in the U.S. is now mobile-only.

While cities like New York are pushing to for low-income households, the FCC has expanded it’s to include mobile connections and the future of universal access likely won’t include broadband at all. And just think of all the things humanity could accomplish if no one ever had to .

According to from the U.S. Census Bureau, more and more American households across a range of incomes are relying on mobile Internet service as their sole means for getting online. In fact, mobile Internet service has reached the point where it now “appears to be competing more directly with wired Internet connections,” writes Giulia McHenry, chief economist of the Office of Policy Analysis and Development.

The data, collected from nearly 53,000 households, shows that three-quarters of American households with Internet are using a DSL, cable or fiber connection to get online at home. While that is still a vast majority, it’s a significant drop from 82 percent in 2013. On the flip side: the proportion of homes that only used a mobile Internet connection went from 10 to 20 percent in the same period. As the Washington Post , roughly one in five online households in the U.S. is now mobile-only.

While cities like New York are pushing to for low-income households, the FCC has expanded it’s to include mobile connections and the future of universal access likely won’t include broadband at all. And just think of all the things humanity could accomplish if no one ever had to .

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