AT&T is widening its Build-A-Plan program by bringing home internet into the mix, giving customers a single package that can combine wireless service with fixed connectivity. The move adds more flexibility to a plan that first launched in May as a way to customize wireless benefits and pricing.
Starting July 7, eligible customers can add AT&T Fiber where service is available or choose AT&T Internet Air in areas not yet covered by fiber. That makes the program more practical for households that want one provider for both mobile and home access.
Two home internet options
The expansion centers on two choices. AT&T Fiber is available only in locations reached by the company’s fiber network, while AT&T Internet Air uses AT&T’s cellular network to deliver fixed home internet.
This gives Build-A-Plan a wider reach because customers do not need to wait for fiber rollout in order to pair a home connection with wireless service. In areas without fiber, Internet Air becomes the alternative path into the same bundled structure.
| Option | Availability | Network Basis |
|---|---|---|
| AT&T Fiber | Only in covered fiber areas | Fiber network |
| AT&T Internet Air | Where Fiber is not available | AT&T cellular network |
Lowest entry price starts at $70 a month
AT&T says the lowest-cost combination begins at $70 per month plus taxes and fees. That total is made up of a $35 wireless plan and a $35 home internet option, either Internet 300 or Internet Air.
The wireless portion at that price includes unlimited data, but speeds are capped at 2Mbps on 5G and 1.5Mbps on 4G. The structure keeps the bill simple while clearly trading speed for a lower monthly entry point.
| Bundle Component | Monthly Price | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Wireless plan | $35 | Unlimited data, capped at 2Mbps on 5G and 1.5Mbps on 4G |
| Home internet | $35 | Internet 300 or Internet Air |
| Total starting bundle | $70 | Plus taxes and fees |
A broader push for flexibility
AT&T has positioned Build-A-Plan as a way for customers to take more control over how their services are arranged. The original wireless-only version focused on adjusting benefits and pricing, and the new expansion extends that idea to the home.
Jenifer Robertson, Executive Vice President and General Manager at AT&T, said customers want connectivity that works together seamlessly and the flexibility to choose what fits their lives. She added that Build-A-Plan already put customers in control of their wireless experience, and adding AT&T Fiber or AT&T Internet Air offers more ways to stay connected.
The broader strategy is straightforward: make it easier for households to put wireless and home internet under one plan without forcing every customer into the same network path. For some, that will mean Fiber, and for others it will mean Internet Air.
AT&T’s latest move shows that the company sees the bundled model as more than a wireless promotion. By opening Build-A-Plan to home internet, it is turning the program into a more complete connectivity package starting July 7.
