Verizon has spent years arguing that its network quality is the one thing competitors cannot replicate. On July 9, it found another place to prove that point.
BMW is giving it the keys, figuratively, to the connectivity layer running inside every new BMW, MINI, and BMW Group vehicle sold in the United States.
The deal is not a traditional wireless contract. It puts Verizon’s 5G Standalone and LTE networks at the center of how BMW’s connected features work, from firmware updates to navigation to subscription services.
And it signals something happening across the auto industry that investors in both sectors should pay attention to.
Verizon and KDDI land BMW connected car deal for the U.S. market
Verizon Business and Japanese telecom company KDDI announced the collaboration on July 9 via a press release.
Under the arrangement, KDDI’s Global Communications Platform acts as the middleware layer that programmatically manages connectivity and data flowing through Verizon’s network into BMW Group vehicles.
The practical effect for drivers is that every new BMW and MINI sold in the U.S. now comes with Verizon-powered telematics built in. That covers BMW Connected Drive services, firmware and map updates delivered over the air, and subscription features.
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Our collaboration with BMW Group and KDDI prioritizes innovation and capability to advance the connected driving experience for drivers across the U.S.,” Verizon Business CEO Kyle Malady said.
Satoshi Oishi, President and CEO of KDDI America, said the company was honored to bring its Global Communications Platform to BMW Group’s next-generation connected vehicle services. KDDI has worked with BMW Group since 2022 and has been building IoT connectivity infrastructure for over two decades.
Why the BMW deal matters for Verizon’s connected car strategy
Verizon already has a significant connected car relationship with Volkswagen Group, where it provides telematics connectivity across VW’s brands, primarily through Audi, according to Light Reading. The BMW partnership extends that footprint into the premium European segment that Volkswagen does not cover.
Daniel Lawson, Senior VP for Global Solutions at Verizon Business, described the scope to Light Reading as covering telematics for the full BMW Group vehicle lineup in the U.S., including “firmware and map updates, subscription services and all the things BMW tracks as part of the driver experience and health of the car.”
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This matters more to Verizon than it might look from the outside. The company’s wireless service revenue is expected to be roughly flat in 2026 as it transitions to what it calls volume-based growth. The traditional consumer phone business does not have the same room to run that it did a decade ago. Connected vehicles represent one of the cleaner paths to recurring revenue that does not depend on smartphone upgrade cycles.
Verizon launched its first BMW connectivity service in 2023, offering voice, data, and unlimited Wi-Fi hotspot access for $20 a month through the My BMW app. The July 9 announcement goes considerably further, embedding Verizon’s network at the infrastructure level rather than as an add-on subscription service.
What BMW gets from the Verizon KDDI partnership
BMW’s incentive is straightforward. Premium car buyers in 2026 do not treat connectivity as a bonus feature. They treat it the way they treat the engine: it either works reliably or it does not, and if it does not, it reflects on the brand.
By locking in Verizon’s 5G Standalone network as the connectivity backbone, BMW gets a stable foundation for all of its digital services in the U.S. market. KDDI’s platform layer means
BMW has granular control over how connectivity and data are managed, rather than depending on whatever a carrier decides to prioritize.
The arrangement also positions BMW well for what comes next. Firmware updates over the air, subscription-based feature unlocks, and vehicle health tracking are all growing parts of how automakers generate post-sale revenue.
A reliable network partner makes those services easier to scale.
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The connected car market Verizon and BMW are both betting on
The global connected car market is projected to grow from roughly $145 billion in 2026 to nearly $570 billion by 2034, according to Fortune Business Insights. That kind of growth curve is what makes automotive connectivity attractive to a carrier like Verizon even if individual deals start small.
AT&T has built a large connected car business through its relationship with General Motors and OnStar.
Verizon has been catching up through its Volkswagen and now BMW relationships, pursuing the market through both direct manufacturer deals and partnerships like this one with KDDI. The race for embedded automotive connectivity is essentially a second wireless subscriber war, except the subscribers are vehicles instead of people.
For investors watching Verizon, the BMW deal is another data point in the company’s push to diversify revenue beyond consumer wireless.
The company also recently signed a joint venture with BT Group to combine their international enterprise operations, according to an SEC filing.
Both moves point in the same direction: Verizon is trying to build recurring enterprise revenue streams that are less tied to how many people upgrade their phone this quarter.
What Verizon’s BMW deal means for telecom and auto investors
Connected car partnerships are not glamorous announcements. They do not move stock prices the way an earnings beat does, and they take years to show up in revenue in a meaningful way. But they compound.
Every vehicle sold with Verizon connectivity embedded is a multi-year recurring revenue relationship that does not require a sales call to renew.
For Verizon investors, the question is whether the company can stack enough of these relationships, across automakers, enterprise IoT, and infrastructure deals, to offset the slower growth in its core wireless business.
BMW is a meaningful name to have on that list. It is a premium brand with buyers who are less price-sensitive and more likely to keep connected services active over the life of the vehicle.
Malady said Verizon is pursuing other automotive opportunities through partnerships like KDDI and directly with manufacturers.
The BMW deal adds to an existing Volkswagen relationship and suggests the company is methodically working through the premium segment of the auto market rather than waiting for one large anchor deal to define the strategy.
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