What are the top sales KPIs for the Telecom Industry in 2027?
Direct Answer
The nine KPIs that actually run a telecom in 2027 are postpaid phone net adds, postpaid phone churn (monthly %), wireless service ARPU ($/mo), fiber/broadband net adds, 5G fixed-wireless-access (FWA) net adds, service revenue growth %, adjusted EBITDA margin, CapEx intensity (CapEx ÷ revenue), and convergence/bundle penetration (% of base on mobile + broadband).
Those nine answer the only three questions Wall Street and the CFO actually care about every quarter: is the wireless flywheel still spinning, are you winning the broadband-and-FWA replacement war for cable, and is the cash generation behind the dividend (Verizon and AT&T) or the buyback (T-Mobile) still real after the 5G + fiber CapEx wave.
1. The Wireless Flywheel (Net Adds × ARPU × Churn)
Wireless is still the value engine — about 70-75% of revenue at Verizon and AT&T and all of it at T-Mobile. The flywheel is a three-variable equation that has not changed since the smartphone era: postpaid phone net adds × service ARPU ÷ churn. Break any one and the model unwinds inside two quarters.
1.1 Postpaid phone net adds
The headline subscriber metric Wall Street trades on. T-Mobile has led the industry every quarter since the Sprint integration, posting 424K postpaid phone net adds in Q1 2026 versus 261K for Verizon Consumer and 324K for AT&T Mobility. Anything sub-100K at the Big-Three signals share loss; negative net adds at a major carrier is a crisis.
1.2 Wireless service ARPU
Service ARPU — phone bill only, no equipment financing — runs roughly $53-58/month across the Big Three on postpaid. The 2024-2026 trend is +1-3% YoY on price hikes plus premium-plan mix (Verizon myPlan, AT&T Unlimited Premium, T-Mobile Magenta MAX) and higher in Q1 2026 thanks to perks pricing.
ARPU declines for two consecutive quarters at a major carrier means competitive promo war.
1.3 Postpaid phone churn
The single best leading indicator of brand health. T-Mobile Q1 2026: 0.86%, Verizon Consumer: 0.89%, AT&T Mobility: 0.85% — all best-in-class globally, anchored by 36-month device-financing lock-in plus convergence bundles. Anything north of 1.10% monthly on postpaid means promotional churn is killing the base.
2. The Broadband and 5G FWA Pivot
The 2024-2027 shift the cable companies didn't price in: telcos are now the net adder in residential broadband, not Comcast or Charter. Fiber plus 5G fixed-wireless-access (FWA) added a combined 1M+ net subscribers in Q1 2026 across AT&T and Verizon while Comcast and Charter posted negative net adds for the fifth straight quarter.
2.1 Fiber net adds
The pure-play overbuild metric. AT&T Fiber: 261K Q1 2026 net adds, 9.8M total subscribers, on track for the 30M fiber-locations target by end of 2026. Verizon Fios added 65K, slower because Fios is mature.
Frontier (now AT&T-owned post-2024 close) is the next leg of fiber net adds. The CapEx-to-net-adds ratio is the real KPI inside the metric.
2.2 5G FWA net adds
The dark horse. T-Mobile 5G Home Internet: 424K Q1 2026 net adds, 7.0M+ total subs; Verizon 5G FWA: 308K Q1 2026 net adds, 4.8M+ total subs. FWA is dilutive to wireless ARPU but highly accretive to broadband margin because there's no last-mile build.
Watch the FWA capacity ceiling — once spectrum saturates in a market, growth stops.
3. Service Revenue + Adjusted EBITDA Margin
Service revenue growth strips out equipment sales (iPhone trade-ins, etc.) and measures the actual subscription business. Verizon Consumer wireless service revenue: +2.7% YoY Q1 2026, AT&T Mobility service revenue: +3.5% YoY, T-Mobile service revenue: +5.1% YoY. Anything sub-2% signals stagnation.
Adjusted EBITDA margin is the operating muscle. T-Mobile: 45-46% (industry-leading thanks to Sprint cost takeouts and no fiber CapEx drag), Verizon: 32-33%, AT&T: 35-36%. The fiber CapEx drag is real — AT&T and Verizon both trade EBITDA margin today for fiber subscriber count tomorrow.
4. CapEx Intensity and the Spectrum Stack
CapEx intensity (CapEx ÷ revenue) is the bet-size on infrastructure. T-Mobile guided ~$9.5B CapEx 2026 (~10% of revenue) — the lowest of the Big Three post-5G build. Verizon: ~$17.5B (~13%), AT&T: ~$22B (~18%) — AT&T is still mid-fiber-build.
CapEx intensity is declining at all three in 2026 vs the 5G-peak 2022-2024 era, which is what unlocks the dividend or buyback.
4.1 Spectrum value
A second-order KPI but critical: each carrier carries $80B-$120B of spectrum on the balance sheet (FCC auction prices). Spectrum impairments — like Verizon's $5.8B mmWave write-down in 2025 — directly hit earnings. Auction wins (the 2024 5.0 GHz and upcoming 3.1-3.45 GHz auctions) are stock-moving events.
5. Convergence, Bundles, and B2B
5.1 Convergence bundle penetration
The most-watched 2026-2027 metric. AT&T: ~40% of fiber households now also take AT&T Mobility; the goal is 50%. Verizon: bundle penetration through myHome / myPlan still under 30%.
Comcast Xfinity Mobile: ~16% of broadband subs take mobile — a defense-only play, not offense. Convergence cuts churn 40-50% and lifts LTV materially.
5.2 B2B wireless and managed services
The forgotten 20-25% of revenue. AT&T Business: ~$30B revenue, Verizon Business: ~$28B revenue. Both are pivoting from legacy wireline to wireless-for-business + private 5G + managed-network + cybersecurity. Watch 5G Edge revenue at Verizon and AT&T Dynamic Defense as the new B2B growth engines.
6. Operating Cadence
Daily: port-ins/outs vs competitors, FWA installs, store activations. Weekly: net adds run-rate, churn trend, agent-channel mix. Monthly: ARPU by tier, fiber CapEx-vs-pass-rate, FWA capacity utilization by market.
Quarterly: full earnings — service revenue, adjusted EBITDA, CapEx intensity, convergence % — and the re-forecast that drives the next quarter's promo decisions.
FAQ
What's the single most important telecom KPI to watch in 2026-2027? Postpaid phone churn. Everything else compounds off it — net adds, ARPU, EBITDA, dividend coverage all flow from a base that's leaking under 1% per month vs leaking over 1%. Watch the monthly number, not the annualized one.
How are FWA economics different from fiber? FWA carries lower direct ARPU than fiber (~$50/mo vs ~$70/mo for fiber gigabit) but higher gross margin per sub because there's no last-mile build. The catch: FWA capacity per cell site is finite, so once spectrum saturates a market, growth stops cold.
Why are bundle/convergence metrics suddenly the most-cited number? Because convergence cuts churn 40-50% and adds 2-3 years of LTV per household. AT&T disclosed that fiber + mobility bundle subscribers churn at roughly half the rate of single-product customers — that math drives every carrier's 2026-2027 strategy.
Is the 5G CapEx wave over? Effectively yes for the macro buildout. T-Mobile finished its 600 MHz mid-band deployment in 2024; Verizon C-band is largely deployed; AT&T is mid-cycle. CapEx intensity is declining at all three in 2026-2027, which is what unlocks the dividend (Verizon/AT&T) and buyback (T-Mobile) cases.
What's the right benchmark for B2B wireless growth? Mid-single-digit YoY at the carrier wireless-for-business segments (Verizon Business mobility, AT&T Business mobility), accelerating to double-digit for the private-5G and managed-edge lines. Sub-3% growth means the carrier is losing share to cable Mobility (Spectrum Mobile, Xfinity Mobile) in the SMB segment.
Bottom Line
Telecom in 2027 is subscribers fund infrastructure, infrastructure funds bundles, bundles fund retention, retention funds capital returns — and the nine KPIs above measure every link in that chain. Track postpaid phone net adds, ARPU, and churn weekly; service revenue growth and EBITDA margin monthly; CapEx intensity, convergence penetration, and B2B mix quarterly.
If postpaid churn drifts north of 1.1% or CapEx intensity does not fall in 2026-2027 as promised, the dividend/buyback case unwinds — and that is the only number a telecom investor cares about.
Sources
- Verizon Communications — Q1 2026 Earnings Release and 10-Q
- AT&T Inc. — Q1 2026 Earnings Release and 10-Q
- T-Mobile US — Q1 2026 Investor Factbook and 10-Q
- Comcast Corporation — Q1 2026 Earnings Release (Xfinity Mobile + broadband detail)
- Charter Communications — Q1 2026 Earnings Release (Spectrum Mobile detail)
- MoffettNathanson — U.S. Telecom & Cable Quarterly research
- Wells Fargo Securities — Wireless Quarterly Tracker
- New Street Research — Telecom and Towers research
- FCC — Spectrum Auction Reports and Form 477 Broadband Deployment data
- USTelecom — Annual State of Broadband Report
- CTIA — Annual Wireless Industry Survey