When you zoom in on the coverage map, it will then break down to 5G Ultra Wideband, 5G Nationwide, 4G LTE and then international and no coverage. C-Band and mmWave are shown as Ultra Wideband. Unfortunately, you can’t see the difference between the two. However, if you do zoom in to street level, you can tell where some places have mmWave and not C-Band. If it only covers streets than it’s mmWave.

The map isn’t quite accurate right now

The map isn’t quite accurate right now

The map isn’t quite accurate right now

As a few people have noted on Twitter, the new coverage map isn’t 100% accurate. It’s showing some areas that have 5G UW that actually don’t.

— 💜 5G (@sierranetworks_) January 25, 2022 For example, I live in Ann Arbor, MI and it shows that virtually the whole city and surrounding suburbs are blanketed in 5G Ultra Wideband, including my apartment. However, I only get 5G in my apartment. So it’s possible that this is where Verizon will be turning on 5G Ultra Wideband in the coming weeks. When Verizon first turned on C-Band last week, there was barely any coverage in Ann Arbor, MI, and now there’s a whole lot more in less than a week. It’s also gotten much faster. So it seems like Verizon isn’t just flipping a switch and turning everything on. What’s also interesting is that airports are blanketed in 5G UW, even though they are not supposed to be. Now this could be, because mmWave is also shown as 5G UW on the map. And some of these airports do have mmWave, and that could be what we’re seeing. Though, it didn’t used to be blanketed in 5G UW. Check out the Verizon Coverage maps for 5G here.