
At 10:24 PM ET last night, Verizon executives officially declared the nationwide blackout “Resolved.” But for thousands of Americans waking up this morning, January 15, the digital nightmare isn’t over.
If you just picked up your phone to find the words “SOS” or “No Service” where your signal bars used to be, you aren’t crazy—and a simple restart might not be enough to fix it. While the “main pipes” of the network are back online, a “Data Ghost” is currently haunting millions of devices, effectively acting as a digital kill switch for users who haven’t performed a specific 2026 deep reset.
Based on Downdetector data and local reports as of 9:30 AM ET today (January 15, 2026):
- Residual Outages: There are currently over 2,300 active reports of “No Service” or “SOS Mode” still lingering across the U.S. While this is down from the peak of 182,000+, it represents a “long tail” of customers who are still disconnected.
- Hotspots: The “Ghost Service” (where the network says it’s fixed but phones aren’t connecting) is most prevalent in New York City, Atlanta, Chicago, Houston, and Dallas.
The ‘Ghost’ in the 2026 System
According to early reports from network engineers and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which has officially launched an investigation into the 10-hour disruption, the problem lies in “stale security tokens.”
When the network crashed yesterday, over 2 million iPhones and Androids “de-synced” from Verizon’s core security protocols. Even though the towers are broadcasting again, many phones are still holding onto a “dead” connection key, causing them to stay in SOS mode indefinitely.
How to Flip the ‘Kill Switch’ Back to ‘On’
If you are still seeing “SOS,” Verizon’s official advice is to “Restart your device.” However, for thousands of users in hubs like New York, Atlanta, and Chicago, a standard power-cycle is failing.
To force your phone to grab a new, valid security token from the restored network, you must perform a Network Reset.
- For iPhone Users: Go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone > Reset > Reset Network Settings.
- For Android Users: Go to Settings > System > Reset Options > Reset Mobile Network Settings.
- The Pro Tip: Turn off your Wi-Fi before you do this. It forces the phone to hunt for the Verizon 5G/LTE tower signal immediately upon rebooting.
The $20 ‘Inconvenience Credit’: How to Claim It
In an update released at 9:30 AM ET this morning, Verizon finally confirmed the compensation amount. The company is offering a $20.00 account credit to those affected. However, do not assume this will just show up on your bill.
To ensure your $20 credit is locked in:
- Log into the MyVerizon App.
- Look for the banner or notification to “Accept” the relief credit.
- If you don’t see the banner, open the Digital Assistant (Chat) and type: “Request Credit for January 14 Outage.” ### The Public Safety Fallout The stakes are higher than just a missed text. The FCC is investigating why the outage prevented 911 calls in several major cities—a direct violation of federal public safety requirements. In New York City and Washington D.C., emergency alerts were issued last night urging residents to use landlines or find a police station.
Did your service come back automatically, or are you still staring at the SOS icon? If you haven’t seen your $20 credit offer in the app yet, let us know your city in the comments below.
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The post The Verizon ‘Kill Switch’: Why Your Phone is Still in ‘SOS Mode’ This Morning Despite the ‘Fix’ appeared first on The Free Financial Advisor.