United StatesMVNO
Noble Mobile
Host Networks
T-Mobile
Get a Klarna Mobile phone plan with priority 5G on AT&T.
Bring your number to get your first month free
Networks
MVNOs depend on one or more host networks for cellular coverage. Compare the speed test performance for the networks powering Noble Mobile in the United States, then click into a host network to explore its coverage maps and detailed network data.
DownDownload
238.5Mbps
UpUpload
14.1Mbps
Reliab.Reliability
8.7/ 10
Cov.Coverage
62.4%
Over 3.6 million tests conducted
Promoted Offers
Get a Klarna Mobile phone plan with priority 5G on AT&T.
Bring your number to get your first month free
Noble Mobile Plans
Compare Noble Mobile plans and pricing in the United States.
No-Bull Plan
Monthly plan
$50/mo
No-Bull Plan
$50/mo
Monthly plan
20 GB Data
Hotspot Included
Unlimited min
Unlimited texts
- 20 GB Datahigh-speed, then data slows
- Hotspot Included
- Unlimited Minutes
- Unlimited Texts
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an MVNO?
An MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) sells mobile service without owning cellular infrastructure. MVNOs like Noble Mobile lease access to major carrier networks in the United States and deliver coverage using those host networks.
Which networks power Noble Mobile?
Noble Mobile uses T-Mobile for coverage in the United States.
How does Noble Mobile coverage compare to major carriers?
MVNO coverage mirrors the host networks it uses. Compare the host carrier performance above to see how those networks perform in the United States.
How can I check coverage in my area?
Use the coverage map above to explore real-time coverage. The map shows the host networks used by Noble Mobile.
What do the performance metrics mean?
The performance metrics summarize median download speed, upload speed, and latency from crowdsourced tests on the host networks listed above. Higher download/upload and lower latency indicate a faster, more responsive connection.
What is the reliability score?
The reliability score summarizes how dependable mobile performance is in the United States. It uses a 0.0 to 10.0 scale (higher is better) and is calculated from real-world speed test percentiles with weighted components: download (50%), latency (30%), and upload (20%). It evaluates the lower-end experience using the bottom 10%, 5%, and 1% percentiles when enough samples are available. If local speed testing is limited, a coverage-based fallback is used from signal quality distribution (great/good/poor).
Why can parts of the coverage map look empty?
Coverage maps are built from crowdsourced tests, so areas with limited recent data can look incomplete. Coverage improves as more tests are collected.
How can I contribute coverage data for the United States?
Download the CoverageMap app and run a few speed tests with location enabled. Your results help improve coverage accuracy and unlock local rankings faster.
Get the app
