Skip to main content

MetroPCS shareholders approve T-Mobile merger

Yup, that T-Mobile/MetroPCS deal is officially happening.

t-mobile

Yup, that T-Mobile/MetroPCS deal is officially happening.

MetroPCS shareholders have approved the merger after T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom “sweetened the deal,” Reuters reports. The merger would see MetroPCS’s more than 9 million subscribers jumping over to T-Mobile’s network.

The approval doesn’t come as much of a surprise. After the feds approved the T-Mobile/MetroPCS merger in March, it was only a matter of time until MetroPCS shareholders caved.


June 5th: The AI Audit in NYC

Join us next week in NYC to engage with top executive leaders, delving into strategies for auditing AI models to ensure fairness, optimal performance, and ethical compliance across diverse organizations. Secure your attendance for this exclusive invite-only event.


While an influx of new subscribers is great for T-Mobile, the deal will also give T-Mobile access to wireless spectrum so it can easily expand its LTE network. T-Mobile currently expects to cover 100 million people with LTE by the middle of the year and 200 million people by year’s end.

It’s also yet another feather in T-Mobile’s cap after it just smashed U.S. carrier tradition by announcing new no-contract cellular plans. T-Mobile’s new CEO John Legere hasn’t been shy about calling out its competitors for confusing and unfair contracted plans. Now T-Mobile is offering simple plans starting at $50 a month, and it’s letting subscribers pay off the cost of new phones rather than locking them in with endless subsidized pricing.