Alerts in 14 Languages: FCC's Multilingual Emergency Overhaul
Published Date: 12/10/2025
Rule
Summary
Starting June 5, 2028, mobile providers must send Wireless Emergency Alerts in English plus 13 other common U.S. languages and American Sign Language to keep everyone in the loop during emergencies. These alerts will include customizable details like location and time, making warnings clearer and more helpful. This change helps make sure everyone, no matter their language, gets important safety info fast—without extra costs for users.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Nationwide multilingual WEA requirement
The FCC requires participating commercial mobile service providers to support Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) templates in English, the next 13 most commonly spoken U.S. languages, and American Sign Language (ASL). The rule sets implementation obligations for providers and establishes an effective/legal milestone tied to this Federal Register action (the document states implementation must occur within 30 months after publication in the Federal Register and certain amendments are effective on June 5, 2028).
ASL alerts: CDI-signed videos plus English text
The Bureau requires non-fillable ASL WEA templates delivered as video files signed by a Certified Deaf Interpreter (CDI). WEA-capable devices must accompany the ASL video with the corresponding English-language fillable template; the ASL templates themselves are non-fillable and will not include captions (the English fillable version is required to follow the ASL video).
Templates for 18 specific emergency types
The Bureau adopts multilingual templates for eighteen alert types: tornado emergency, tornado warning, flash flood emergency, flash flood warning, severe thunderstorm, snow squall, dust storm, hurricane, storm surge, extreme wind, test alert, fire, tsunami, earthquake, boil water, avalanche, hazardous materials, and 911 outage. The Bureau declined to adopt generic evacuation and shelter-in-place templates and notes templates are optional for alert originators to use.
Fillable templates must include event details
For English and the 13 written languages, the Bureau requires fillable WEA templates that allow alert originators to insert four fields: the sending agency ([SENDING AGENCY]), the location ([LOCATION]), the time ([TIME]), and an optional URL ([URL]). The Bureau also requires that the contents of those fillable fields need not be translated into the template language (the fillable elements are not required to be dynamically translated).
Non-English alerts shown with English version
WEA-capable mobile devices must display the non-English template first (when the device default is one of the 13 supported languages) and must accompany that display with the corresponding English-language fillable template afterward. The Bureau requires the non-English alert to appear first so recipients initially see the alert in their device's configured language, with English presented alongside for clarity and redundancy.
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