Brightspeed has secured more than $528 million in federal Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program funding to expand its fiber network across 17 states, reaching nearly 183,000 new homes and businesses in underserved rural areas. The new awards bring Brightspeed’s total BEAD-backed commitments to more than half a billion dollars, with the largest allocations going to Missouri ($117.3 million for 61,743 locations) and Wisconsin ($134.9 million for 44,276 locations).
The company is already investing billions of dollars to deploy next-generation fiber to over five million homes and businesses in 20 states. Its network currently reaches more than 2.5 million locations and is expanding by thousands each month. In addition to BEAD, Brightspeed has received nearly $295 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds across 13 states, which will extend high-speed connectivity to an additional 140,000 residents.
Executives framed the federal subsidies as an accelerator for closing the digital divide. “Our investment, combined with this latest round of BEAD funding, is about more than laying fiber; it’s about changing lives,” said Michel Combes, Brightspeed’s Executive Chairman & CEO. Pamela Sherwood, VP of Brightspeed’s Broadband Office, added that the combined federal and state investments will empower small businesses, schools, and families in rural America with the connectivity needed to compete in the digital economy.
• Brightspeed won $528.1 million in BEAD funds across 17 states
• Expansion will add 182,900 rural homes and businesses to its fiber footprint
• Major state awards: Missouri ($117.3M, 61,743 locations), Wisconsin ($134.9M, 44,276 locations), North Carolina ($90.6M, 13,744 locations)
• $294.6M in ARPA funds already allocated to Brightspeed for 140,000 additional connections
• Brightspeed’s fiber build targets over 5 million locations across 20 states
Brightspeed BEAD & ARPA Funding by State (2025)
| State | BEAD Funding | Locations Added | ARPA Funding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | $14,302,871 | 4,417 | Yes |
| Arkansas | $26,279,777 | 13,791 | Yes |
| Georgia | $2,265,592 | 1,405 | – |
| Illinois | $3,237,626 | 1,201 | Yes |
| Indiana | $24,533,972 | 9,203 | Yes |
| Louisiana | $5,751,955 | 2,609 | – |
| Michigan | $19,704,802 | 8,746 | Yes |
| Missouri | $117,333,760 | 61,743 | – |
| New Jersey | $37,500 | 112 | Yes |
| North Carolina | $90,599,048 | 13,744 | Yes |
| Ohio | $16,243,816 | 5,424 | Yes |
| Oklahoma | $1,893,595 | 148 | – |
| Pennsylvania | $40,014,425 | 9,083 | Yes |
| South Carolina | $10,400 | 118 | Yes |
| Tennessee | $14,338,845 | 2,757 | Yes |
| Virginia | $16,661,198 | 4,963 | Yes |
| Wisconsin | $134,953,282 | 44,276 | Yes |
*ARPA funding indicates states where Brightspeed also received American Rescue Plan Act allocations in addition to BEAD support.
🌐 Analysis: Brightspeed’s BEAD success underscores how mid-tier fiber builders are leveraging federal and state subsidy programs to accelerate rural broadband rollouts. With AT&T, Lumen, and Frontier also tapping into BEAD, competitive dynamics in underserved regions are intensifying. The combined BEAD and ARPA awards highlight how policy-driven investments are reshaping U.S. broadband infrastructure, with smaller but aggressive players like Brightspeed scaling rapidly to close the digital divide.
