FCC says it will move toward 2027 auction of mid-band wireless spectrum


United States Federal Communications Commission logo and U.S. flag are seen in this illustration taken April 23, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

WASHINGTON, June ⁠30 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Communications Commission says it will soon vote ⁠on an order that sets up a 2027 auction of ‌mid-band wireless spectrum that is a focus point for 5G use.

In a statement released Tuesday, the FCC said it would vote on July 22 to hold an auction of 160 ​megahertz of spectrum in what's known as the ⁠Upper C-Band next year. Legislation ⁠passed last year required the auction of at least 100 megahertz of ⁠spectrum ‌but the statement said the FCC aimed to clear "significantly more spectrum than the minimum required under law."

It said it expected the ⁠sale to raise billions of dollars.

Various parts of the ​wireless spectrum are ‌reserved for different kinds of technology and communication services, but the ⁠increasing demands of ​data-hungry phones, connected devices, and autonomous cars have put pressure on regulators to expand the chunk devoted to 5G communications, which operators typically like to use ⁠on the C-Band because it offers the ​ideal mix of broad coverage and high performance.

Because the Upper C-Band is already being used by satellite transmissions and airplane safety aids called altimeters, any future ⁠sale would have to make sure new entrants could either safely coexist with devices using the same frequency or that existing incumbents shift to using a different part of the spectrum.

The FCC said its proposed rules ​envisioned the establishment of "retrofit rebates" to support the ⁠domestic aviation sector in upgrading its altimeters so that they're insulated from 5G ​interference, and that satellite operators would be "fairly ‌and expeditiously" moved out of the reconfigured ​portion of the Upper C-Band, with financial compensation being paid for clearing the spectrum.

(Reporting by Raphael Satter; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

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