SAN JOSE, Calif.—Verizon plans to double the speeds available through its 5G Home service in the next six months.

Verizon plans to double the speeds available through its 5G Home service in the next six months, the company’s VP of technology development and planning said during a presentation here at the SCWS Americas show.

Verizon’s Bill Stone explained that Verizon currently runs its 5G Home service in its 28 GHz licensed spectrum in 400 MHz channels. But he said the carrier has the ability to increase that spectrum allotment to 600 MHz and 800 MHz channels (Verizon owns huge amounts of millimeter-wave spectrum via its purchases of XO and Straight Path). Stone explained that expanding the service’s spectrum channels would both increase user speeds and increase Verizon's network capacity.

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And he said that, in the next six months, Verizon will essentially double its 5G Home channel configurations from 400 MHz to 800 MHz, and that the speeds and capacity available through the service would double as a result.

Verizon currently promises that customers of its 5G Home service will receive download speeds of around 300 Mbps. However, the carrier has said that speeds can range up to 1 Gbps depending on customers’ location in relation to the towers for the service. The carrier currently charges customers $70 per month for 5G Home services, or $50 per month for customers who also subscribe to the carrier’s mobile services.

“The peak data rates here in millimeter-wave will definitely increase,” Stone said.

But the introduction of 800 MHz channels isn’t the only change Verizon is contemplating for its 5G Home service. Both Stone and Ronan Dunne, chief of Verizon’s consumer business, said at separate events this week that the operator is eventually planning to offer a self-installation option to customers who sign up for the carrier’s 5G Home service.

When Verizon initially launched its 5G Home service in October, it boasted that the necessary receivers and modems would be installed by Verizon technicians with “white glove” service. That was notable considering Verizon executives had previously hinted that customers might be able to install their own receivers—thus saving Verizon the expense of sending technicians to customers’ homes.

However, Dunne explained that the operator continues to work to reduce the amount of time that technicians must spend installing its 5G Home service in customers’ homes. Further, he said that, eventually, Verizon would offer a self-installation option for its 5G Home service.

Stone offered similar comments on the self installation option: “Over time the goal is to introduce the ability to drop ship equipment that the customer can install on their own,” Stone said, without providing a timeline for such a move.

Both Verizon’s Dunne and Stone offered a number of notable insights into Verizon’s 5G Home service this week during their respective public appearances, including: