USDA has proposed a budget for the next fiscal year, starting October 1, which contains drastic cuts for broadband. Overall, the agency is proposing to cut its overall discretionary funding by $4.9 billion, a 19% reduction. The cuts align with the proposed White House budget recommendations for the next fiscal year, that includes the following language:
USDA’s Rural Development programs are streamlined to focus on programs that have demonstrated efficient results and are an appropriate Federal role. . . No new USDA funding is needed for broadband expansion, as existing balances and other Federal resources are meeting planned growth. The Budget would also eliminate programs that are duplicative, too small to have macro-economic impact, costly to deliver, in limited demand, available through the private sector, or conceived as temporary. These include rural business programs, single family housing direct loans, self-help housing grants, telecommunications loans, and rural housing vouchers. Rural Development salaries and expenses are reduced commensurately.
Probably the biggest headline in the proposed USDA budget is that it completely eliminates the ReConnect grant program. The agency argues that ReConnect funding would be duplicative since BEAD and other grant programs have eliminated the need for additional rural broadband infrastructure spending.
There is still $230 million remaining in the proposed budget for rural broadband, including $200 million in new broadband loans and $30 million in rural telehealth grants. The new budget claws back $40 million in unused funds still sitting unclaimed in the ReConnect pilot program.
This may not be the end of the ReConnect story, since Congress has the ultimate say in the budget. The program is still very popular with politicians. There have been several occasions in the past when Congress added funding for Reconnect during the reconciliation of the annual agriculture budget. As recently as November 2025, Senators Roger Marshall (R-Kansas) and Peter Welch (D-Vermont) introduced a bill that would provide $650 million annually through 2030 for ReConnect. But unless something like that bill happens this summer, the ReConnect program would be officially dead in October.
If ReConnect dies, there will be almost no remaining federal broadband grant programs. There is still $500 million available to NTIA for Tribal grants, but that’s the only remaining funding I am aware of. It would be a shame to see broadband grants disappear. Everybody who understands rural broadband knows that there will still be plenty of broadband gaps after BEAD grants are finally awarded. Some of these gaps will come from grant defaults. I’m hearing rumblings of BEAD defaults where ISPs will walk away from BEAD rather than sign the BEAD contracts. There will likely be more defaults of RDOF. There are a lot of projects funded by ARPA and the Capital Project Fund that won’t finish construction before the funding dries up at the end of this calendar year.
Defaulted grants aren’t the only places that won’t have good broadband. Jim Stegean, the president and CEO of CostQuest, which manages the FCC broadband maps, recently estimated there will be 2.1 million unserved or underserved locations left after BEAD. I think that number is conservatively small due to ISPs that claim 100/20 Mbps or faster in the FCC maps, but are delivering something slower. Not included in this estimate are the many urban MDUs that don’t have adequate broadband – something that was theoretically addressable by BEAD.
We’ll have to wait out the Congressional budget cycle, but unless somebody in Congress works hard to resurrect BEAD, the last broadband infrastructure grant program will soon be dead.






