Verizon VZ-N raised its annual profit forecast on Monday after revamped customer offers and bundled plans drove surprise first-quarter wireless subscriber additions.
The company’s shares rose 3 per cent in premarket trading.
With deals such as offering better terms to customers who brought in bills from rivals like AT&T T-N and T-Mobile TMUS-Q, Verizon worked to draw in paying subscribers as part of a broader turnaround push to revive wireless growth.
Verizon added 55,000 monthly bill-paying wireless subscribers in the quarter, its first net gains for the March-ended period in more than a decade.
Analysts polled by Visible Alpha had expected wireless subscribers to decrease by 81,809.
“We are beginning to reclaim our market leadership by putting the customer at the center of everything we do, reducing friction to increase loyalty and create genuine value,” Verizon CEO Dan Schulman said.
The company now expects its total retail postpaid phone net additions for the year to be in the upper half of its forecast of 750,000 to 1 million.
Like AT&T, Verizon has leaned into discounted bundles combining high-speed internet and wireless plans, a strategy aimed at boosting customer retention.
Verizon’s results reflect the inclusion of Frontier after the deal closed on Jan. 20.
The company’s total quarterly revenue came in at US$34.4-billion, compared with estimates of US$34.84-billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Wireless service revenue growth for the quarter was impacted by customer credits tied to a January service outage that lasted for about 10 hours, for which Verizon offered a US$20 credit to hundreds of thousands of customers.
Verizon now sees adjusted profit for 2026 between US$4.95 and US$4.99 per share, compared with its prior forecast of between US$4.90 and US$4.95.
For the first quarter, Verizon reported an adjusted profit of US$1.28 per share, compared with estimates of US$1.20.