2026-03741Notice

FCC Tweaks Lifeline Privacy Rules to Fight Fraud Sneakily

Published Date: 2/25/2026

Notice

Summary

The FCC is updating its Lifeline Program records to better protect your info and fight fraud. This program helps low-income folks get discounts on phone and internet services. Changes take effect February 25, 2026, with a chance to comment by March 27, 2026—no extra costs involved, just smarter data handling!

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 2 costs, 1 mixed.

Sensitive Personal Data Collected and Stored

The Lifeline system stores sensitive data such as names, dates of birth, last four digits of Social Security numbers or full Tribal identification numbers, residential addresses and geolocation, IP addresses, financial information, usernames/passwords, voice recordings, and benefit amounts. Paper documents submitted by applicants will be digitized and paper copies destroyed, and electronic records are kept on FCC and USAC servers with stated NIST/FISMA protections.

Your Lifeline Records Sent to Treasury

The FCC added a new rule letting the agency share Lifeline applicants' and recipients' records with the U.S. Department of the Treasury for review in the Do Not Pay Working System. That sharing is for identifying, preventing, or recouping improper payments and the new routine use will become effective March 27, 2026 unless comments change that.

Broad Sharing With Contractors and States

The Lifeline records can be shared with many outside parties including USAC contractors, business process outsourcing entities, state agencies, social service agencies, Tribal Nations, and service providers to run eligibility checks, enrollment, recertification, call centers, and dispute resolution. These routine uses let non-FCC staff and third parties access personally identifying and eligibility information to operate the program.

Breach Response and Notification Procedures

If the FCC suspects or confirms a data breach of the Lifeline records, it may disclose records to appropriate agencies, entities (including USAC), and persons to assist in response, prevention, or remediation. The notice says the FCC will share information and may get assistance from other Federal agencies to respond to breaches.

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Key Dates

Published Date
Comments Due
2/25/2026
3/27/2026

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Federal Communications Commission
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