Free government phones in Denver, Colorado — Lifeline application guide
Residents of Denver, Colorado who participate in SNAP, Medicaid, SSI, Federal Public Housing Assistance, or the Veterans Pension — or whose household income is at or below 135% of the federal poverty guideline — qualify for free monthly wireless service through the federal Lifeline program. Most carriers serving Denver bundle that benefit with a free Android smartphone for first-time enrollees, so a qualifying Denver household typically pays nothing out of pocket: no contract, no deposit, no recurring bill, and no credit check.
This page covers the practical detail you need to apply in Denver: which Lifeline carriers operate here, which underlying networks (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile) deliver the strongest coverage in the metro area, what documents the National Verifier accepts, and how long approval typically takes for Denver applicants. Colorado uses the federal National Verifier. The Colorado PUC tracks Lifeline subscriber counts but does not administer a parallel benefit.
Lifeline carriers serving Denver
Denver is served by every USAC-approved Lifeline provider that operates in Colorado — currently 12 national carriers. The right carrier for your Denver address depends primarily on which underlying network has the best signal at home: Verizon, AT&T, or T-Mobile. All Lifeline carriers ride on one of these three networks, so coverage matters more than promotional differences in monthly data or device class. Below is the full list with the underlying network for each carrier.
| Carrier | Network | Monthly data | Free phone | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SafeLink Wireless | Verizon, T-Mobile, AT&T (multi-carrier) | 25 GB | Smartphone (model varies by region) | Apply → |
| Assurance Wireless | T-Mobile | 25 GB | Android smartphone (model varies) | Apply → |
| Q Link Wireless | T-Mobile | 20 GB | Android smartphone (rotating models) | Apply → |
| TruConnect | T-Mobile | 14 GB | Free smartphone with optional hotspot capability | Apply → |
| Access Wireless | T-Mobile | 15 GB | Free entry-level Android device | Apply → |
| StandUp Wireless | AT&T, T-Mobile (multi-carrier) | 14 GB | Free smartphone with first-time enrollment | Apply → |
| Cintex Wireless | T-Mobile | 10 GB | Free 4G LTE smartphone | Apply → |
| Life Wireless | T-Mobile | 8 GB | Free smartphone with select state plans | Apply → |
| enTouch Wireless | T-Mobile | 6 GB | Free smartphone after eligibility approval | Apply → |
| AirTalk Wireless | T-Mobile, Verizon | 25 GB | Free 4G/5G smartphone, premium upgrades available | Apply → |
| easyWireless | T-Mobile | 10 GB | Free smartphone with enrollment | Apply → |
| Tag Mobile | T-Mobile | 5 GB | Free smartphone provided to qualifying customers | Apply → |
Network coverage in Denver
All three major networks offer strong coverage across most of Denver's denser neighborhoods, but coverage at your specific street address can vary. Before choosing a carrier, look up your Denver zip code on the underlying carrier's coverage map to confirm signal strength. Verizon historically has the broadest rural-edge coverage near Denver; T-Mobile has aggressively expanded mid-band 5G in metro Denver in recent years; AT&T's FirstNet build-out has improved coverage in Denver public-safety zones. Whichever you pick, you can switch your Lifeline benefit to a different carrier as often as once every 60 days at no cost.
Eligibility for Denver households
You qualify for Lifeline in Denver through one of two paths. Program path: if anyone in your household receives SNAP, Medicaid, SSI, Section 8, or Veterans Pension, the entire household qualifies regardless of income. Income path: if your total household income is at or below 135% of the federal poverty guideline, you qualify on income alone — no qualifying program required. Most Denver applicants qualify through the program path because federal program participation is widespread in metro Colorado.
| Household size | 2025 Lifeline limit (135% FPL) |
|---|---|
| 1 person | $20,331 |
| 2 people | $27,594 |
| 3 people | $34,857 |
| 4 people | $42,120 |
For larger households in Denver, see the full Colorado income limit table.
Qualifying assistance programs (Denver)
If your household participates in any of the following federal programs, your Denver household qualifies for Lifeline automatically. You'll upload one piece of documentation showing current enrollment.
- SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program)Sometimes called food stamps or EBT. Active SNAP enrollment qualifies the entire household for Lifeline.
- MedicaidIncludes most state Medicaid expansions. A current Medicaid card or coverage letter is sufficient documentation.
- Supplemental Security Income (SSI)A monthly federal payment for adults and children with a qualifying disability or low-income seniors 65+.
- Federal Public Housing AssistanceOften called Section 8. Includes Housing Choice Vouchers and project-based Section 8.
- Veterans Pension or Survivors BenefitA needs-based VA pension paid to wartime veterans or surviving spouses; distinct from VA disability compensation.
How to apply for Lifeline in Denver
The application takes about 15 minutes start-to-finish if you have your documents ready. There is no application fee, no deposit, no credit check, and no in-person visit required for Denver applicants. Here is the exact sequence:
- Pick a carrier from the list above based on which underlying network covers your Denver address best.
- Open the carrier's official enrollment page directly. We always link out — your information goes straight to the carrier and the USAC National Verifier.
- Enter your information: name, Denver address, last four of your Social Security number, date of birth, and your qualifying program (or income).
- Upload your documents: a government-issued photo ID, one proof of Denver address (utility bill, lease, paycheck stub), and either a benefit-program letter or proof of income.
- Wait for approval. Most Denver applications are approved same-day by the National Verifier. A small number require manual review and take 3–7 business days.
- Receive your free phone. Carriers ship to Denver addresses within 5–10 business days. Activate by following the included instructions.
For a deeper walkthrough see the Colorado step-by-step application guide, or the Colorado documents checklist for accepted document formats.
Where to get application help in Denver
If you don't have reliable internet at home or need help uploading documents, public libraries throughout Denver provide free computer access, scanning, and printing. Many county social-service offices in metro Colorado can help residents complete the National Verifier portion of the Lifeline application during normal business hours. Carrier customer service lines (toll-free) can also walk you through the application by phone — useful if you don't yet have a working phone or smartphone.
Common Denver Lifeline questions
Is the free phone really $0 in Denver? Yes. The federal subsidy of $9.25 per month ($34.25 on Tribal lands) covers the entire monthly cost at every Lifeline-approved carrier serving Denver. There is no bill, no taxes, and no recovery fees because Lifeline service is treated as exempt federal assistance.
Can I keep my existing Denver phone number? Yes. During application you can choose to either receive a new number or port your existing number from your previous carrier. Porting takes a few business days and is free.
What if I move within Denver or to another part of Colorado? Just update your address with the carrier through their app or customer service line. Your service follows you. If you move out of Colorado, see the national recertification guide for transferring the benefit.
How long does the free phone last? As long as you keep using the line at least once every 30 days and recertify your eligibility once a year, your free service in Denver continues indefinitely. The phone itself is yours to keep regardless.
More Colorado Lifeline guides
- Colorado Lifeline overview — every approved carrier statewide
- Colorado eligibility & income limits
- Colorado step-by-step application
- Best Lifeline carriers in Colorado
- Other Colorado cities