FCC Reforms Lifeline: Bridging Digital Divide Without the Waste
Published Date: 4/3/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The FCC is updating rules to make sure low-income Americans get the Lifeline and Affordable Connectivity programs they need without waste or fraud. These changes will protect funding, help service providers follow the rules, and make the programs easier to use. If you want to share your thoughts, comments are due by May 4, 2026, so don’t miss out!
Analyzed Economic Effects
9 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 3 costs, 4 mixed.
Immigrant Eligibility Limits Under PRWORA
The FCC tentatively concludes Lifeline is a "Federal public benefit" and a "means-tested public benefit" under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA). If adopted, that finding would bar non-qualified aliens from Lifeline and could make qualified aliens subject to a five-year waiting period before receiving Lifeline benefits; the NPRM notes there were more than 2 million non-citizens illegally assigned SSNs in 2024.
Proposal to Collect Full Social Security Numbers
The FCC proposes requiring Lifeline applicants to provide the full nine-digit Social Security Number (instead of only the last four digits) for identity verification. The NPRM asks about privacy, security, compliance costs, and how carriers and enrollment agents would store or protect full SSNs.
Secondary Consent Verification for Enrollment/Transfers
The FCC proposes requiring a secondary verification (for example, an affirmative text or email response) before a Lifeline enrollment or transfer is effectuated and seeks comment on requiring consent timestamps and methods. The NPRM notes this could protect consumers from enrollments made without their knowledge but raises concerns for survivors of domestic abuse and people without devices.
Potential Limits on Benefit Transfers
The FCC is considering imposing additional restrictions on transfers of Lifeline support, such as applying a one-transfer-per-calendar-month limit (used in ACP), freezing transfers for 60 or 90 days after enrollment, or requiring de-enrollment and re-application to change providers. These steps are proposed to reduce unwanted or fraudulent transfers.
Mobile Data Minimum: Revising Update Mechanism
The current Lifeline mobile broadband minimum data allowance is 4.5 GB per month. The FCC tentatively concludes it should revise or eliminate the existing automatic update rule (which, if applied, would have increased the standard to much higher amounts—for example, a paused update would have raised the standard to roughly 29 GB on December 1, 2025). The NPRM seeks comment on new approaches for setting and updating mobile data minimums.
Use of Federal Verification Systems (SAVE, Do Not Pay)
The FCC proposes requiring USAC to use federal verification systems such as the SAVE program and the Department of Treasury's Do Not Pay system to verify Lifeline applicants' identity and lawful status. The NPRM asks commenters about accuracy, cost-effectiveness, and whether these systems should supplement or replace commercial database checks.
Shortening National Verifier Enrollment Window
Currently, a National Verifier eligibility result is valid for 90 days to enroll with an ETC; the FCC seeks comment on shortening that period to 60 days or 30 days. Shortening the window would reduce the time applicants have to complete enrollment with a provider.
Fixed Broadband Data Standard Review (1280 GB)
The current fixed broadband Lifeline minimum data usage allowance is 1280 GB per month. The FCC seeks comment on clarifying or revising how this fixed broadband data standard should be updated and whether an "appropriateness" standard should continue to use what a "substantial majority" of consumers subscribe to.
Mobile Speed Minimum Under Review (3G Baseline)
The current minimum mobile broadband speed standard in Lifeline rules is 3G. The FCC seeks comment on whether the mobile speed standard should be revised and whether the Wireline Competition Bureau should retain discretion to increase the standard, noting that some Lifeline subscribers already receive 4G LTE or 5G but some rural areas only have 3G.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
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