Tethering allows other devices to connect to a cellular-enabled device (like a smartphone or standalone hotspot) via USB, Bluetooth®, or Wi-Fi®. These connected devices can then share your cellular device’s internet connection.
Read on to learn how tethering and hotspot technologies work, how to pick the best data plan for tethering, and how to troubleshoot connectivity issues.
Smartphone hotspots and standalone mobile hotspots work in very much the same way:
Before you use your smartphone’s mobile hotspot...
Prior to using your smartphone as a mobile hotspot, make sure your phone’s wireless (cellular) plan allows hotspot data. Some plans might not include hotspot data or might charge extra for it. Many smartphone plans include hotspot data limits.
The following AT&T unlimited* wireless plans include hotspot data:
*AT&T may temporarily slow data speeds if the network is busy.
Check out our support article for help setting up your mobile hotspot.
Setting up a standalone mobile hotspot is easy. All you need to do is:
Power on the hotspot device and activate your AT&T data plan.
Enable and name your hotspot’s Wi-Fi network. Set up a Wi-Fi network password for an added layer of security.
On the device that you want to connect to the hotspot, look for the Wi-Fi network name shown on your hotspot's screen. Select the network and enter the hotspot password.
Here are some tips on how to troubleshoot these common challenges:
If your other devices can’t locate your hotspot’s network signal, there are a couple of easy fixes you can try:
Hotspot has slow internet speeds
Seeing slow internet speeds or intermittent connectivity issues when using a smartphone or standalone hotspot?
USB tethering connection isn’t working
Check out our article about hotspot troubleshooting.
Tethering and mobile hotspot FAQ