KEY POINTS
  • Sixteen million U.S. households have been relying on federal broadband subsidies to keep internet access within their budgets.
  • The current subsidy is expected to run out of funding next year, and unless it is renewed by Congress all of the enrolled households could lose affordable broadband.
  • February marked the two-year anniversary of the debut of the Emergency Broadband Benefit, the first of the two pandemic-era broadband subsidies.

Over the past two years, millions of low-income U.S. households have received broadband internet at a discount through two consecutive government programs.

But they could soon lose that benefit. More than 16 million U.S. households are currently enrolled in the federal government's Affordable Connectivity Program, or ACP, which offers a $30 discount on broadband services to qualifying low-income households. Funding for it is expected to run out next year.