The U.S. has spent billions to bring broadband to rural communities—but many of the people it’s meant to help still aren’t logging on.

Unless governments focus on adoption—not just access—they risk funding infrastructure that goes unused, while rural Americans remain cut off from healthcare, education, and the growing remote job market that today represents nearly a quarter of the U.S. workforce .

Most public discussion around rural broadband has centered on availability. Federal and state programs have rightly prioritized reaching remote areas, building towers, and upgrading last-mile delivery. But access doesn’t guarantee uptake. Across rural America, broadband networks are expanding—yet adoption remains stubbornly low in many regions.

As recently as 2021, nearly one in five rural

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