US wireless data usage hit record 100 trillion megabytes in 2023

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,626   +198
Staff member
In a nutshell: Wireless data usage has hit an all-time high and there is no evidence to suggest the explosive growth will slow anytime soon. According to the CTIA's annual wireless industry survey, wireless networks served a staggering 100 trillion megabytes of data in 2023. That is an 89 percent increase compared to 2021, and is more data than was used from 2010 to 2018 combined.

CTIA, the trade organization representing the US wireless industry, said the additional 26 trillion MBs used last year is a 36 percent increase over 2022 and is the largest single-year increase in wireless data ever. It is also enough data for every household in the country to watch the first season of House of the Dragon daily for an entire year.

By 2029, Ericsson predicts that Americans' data usage could increases by more than three times the current rate.

The continued proliferation of 5G networks is helping to drive growth as well. The CTIA said that by the end of 2023, nearly 40 percent of all wireless connections – including smartphones, IoT devices, and wearables – were 5G and that more than 330 million Americans were covered by at least one 5G network. The total number of wireless connections reached 558 million, or more than 1.6 connections for each American.

The trend is only expected to increase in the coming years as network operators pump even more money into the system. The industry collectively invested $30 billion in 2023 to improve their networks, pushing the total US wireless industry spend to more than $700 billion to date ($190 billion of which has come since 2018). A total of 432,469 cell sites were in operation across the country at the end of 2023, an increase of 24 percent since 2018.

Wireless data is also more affordable now than it ever has been. The cost per MB has dropped 50 percent since 2020 and 97 percent versus a decade ago, down to just $.002 per MB.

Image credit: Frederik Lipfert

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Not surprised one bit. Smartphones are like "crack cocaine". Walk into a restaurant. What do you see? Everyone with their head buried in a phone. Walk around any college campus. What do you see? Kids
with their heads buried in their phones. Shoot, driving a vehicle what do you see? A lot of people texting
on their phones.
And what are most people doing on them? Most likely "social media" nonsense.
I should have been a doctor. In 10 years, there will be a lot of demand for neck surgery because of "cell phone
neck" syndrome LOL
 
Not surprised one bit. Smartphones are like "crack cocaine". Walk into a restaurant. What do you see? Everyone with their head buried in a phone. Walk around any college campus. What do you see? Kids
with their heads buried in their phones. Shoot, driving a vehicle what do you see? A lot of people texting
on their phones.
And what are most people doing on them? Most likely "social media" nonsense.
I should have been a doctor. In 10 years, there will be a lot of demand for neck surgery because of "cell phone
neck" syndrome LOL
Eventually they will begin to realize, this cannot be healthy. mental problem rates already suggest that. But no, those are because of the video games.
 
I actually cancelled my data plan altogether last month - it reduced my phone bill quite a bit, I can still call and text, and there's wifi everywhere I actually need it anyway. I find having to log on makes me less likely to browse out of habit, and I like being able to go for a walk in the park and actually "get away" from the internet. It makes me feel more present in the real world.
 
Not surprised one bit. Smartphones are like "crack cocaine". Walk into a restaurant. What do you see? Everyone with their head buried in a phone. Walk around any college campus. What do you see? Kids
with their heads buried in their phones. Shoot, driving a vehicle what do you see? A lot of people texting
on their phones.
And what are most people doing on them? Most likely "social media" nonsense.
I should have been a doctor. In 10 years, there will be a lot of demand for neck surgery because of "cell phone
neck" syndrome LOL
Right on point! And, I have noticed. I personally use a flip phone. Mostly because I'm not paying the kind of money these companies want for a good Smartphone...
 
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