
If you were impacted by the massive network failure on January 14, 2026, you are likely eligible for the Verizon outage credit, a $20 compensation now being offered to millions. After a 10-hour disruption that left smartphones stuck in “SOS mode” across the United States, Verizon has officially apologized and launched a manual redemption process for account holders to reclaim a portion of their monthly bill.
Verizon outage credit summary table:
Feature Details Credit Amount $20.00 Eligibility Impacted wireless customers (Jan 14, 2026) Primary Claim Method MyVerizon App > Take Action Business Redemption Direct contact from Verizon Technical Cause Software issue (New Jersey server failure) Action Required? Yes (Must be manually accepted) What caused the January 14 outage?After nearly a full day of silence regarding the technical root cause, Verizon confirmed that the disruption was due to a significant software issue. While early rumors on social media pointed toward potential cyberattacks, Verizon engineering teams ruled out any security breaches. Instead, internal reports suggest a server failure in New Jersey triggered a cascading effect that knocked out voice, data, and SMS services for over 1.7 million users at its peak.
The outage primarily hit major hubs like New York City, Boston, and Washington D.C. before spreading to Chicago, Los Angeles, and Atlanta. Rivals T-Mobile and AT&T confirmed their networks remained stable, leaving Verizon to handle the fallout alone.
How to claim your $20 Verizon outage creditIt is important to note that the Verizon outage credit is not automatically applied to your bill. To receive the compensation, you must proactively claim it.
Step 1: Wait for the text notificationVerizon is rolling out the credit in waves. Most customers will receive a text message confirming their account is eligible. If you haven’t received a text yet, you can still check the app manually, as some users have reported the offer appearing before the notification arrives.
Step 2: Use the MyVerizon appIf the app is crashing or the banner isn’t appearing, you can still secure your Verizon outage credit by:
A point of frustration for many is that the Verizon outage credit is currently being issued per account, not per line. For a family of five on a shared plan, the $20 remains the same total amount.
Business customers: If you are on an enterprise or business plan, you do not need to use the app. Verizon stated that business accounts will be contacted directly via email or their dedicated account managers to handle compensation.
Credit value: Verizon claims the $20 covers “multiple days of service” for the average user, contrasting with the $5 credit AT&T offered during its 2024 outage.
Even though the network is fully restored, thousands of devices remain disconnected from the core infrastructure. If your phone still shows “SOS” or zero bars, the solution is simple: Restart your device. A full power cycle (turning the phone completely off and back on) is required to re-authenticate your SIM card with the repaired network servers. Toggling Airplane Mode is often insufficient for a disruption of this scale.