
Airtel’s Unlimited 5G offer has sparked questions over whether users can share the benefit through a mobile hotspot, but the situation is not as clear-cut as it first appeared. While some users have pointed to the terms and conditions page, based on our own research, Airtel’s T&C page mentions no such restriction, which leaves the actual situation a little muddy. Let’s discuss it in more detail below.
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Airtel’s Unlimited 5G and the hotspot question
Airtel’s Unlimited 5G Data offer is available on top of select prepaid and postpaid plans for users with a 5G phone and Airtel 5G Plus coverage. Once activated through the Airtel app, it gives users unlimited 5G data on the handset itself, but the question is whether that benefit extends to hotspot sharing as well.
That is where the confusion begins as some users have shared screenshots and online posts suggesting that hotspot use may not be allowed under the offer, but those examples alone do not give us a definite answer. Based on the current information available and the company’s main terms-and-conditions page, the hotspot issue does not appear to be clearly established either way. It would be safe to say that you can utilise your unlimited 5G data through a hotspot without problems.
We already saw reports that Airtel doesn’t allow Unlimited 5G data sharing via mobile hotspot.
— Abhishek Yadav (@yabhishekhd) July 16, 2026
Now, it is officially mentioned on Airtel’s website that mobile hotspot is not allowed on its Unlimited 5G mobile data plan.
The 300GB monthly data cap has also been there since the… pic.twitter.com/j7Y5dm6h2L
Many users rely on their phones to share data with laptops, tablets, or other devices. If Airtel does restrict hotspot use in practice, the offer would remain a handset-only benefit. If not, it would make the plan much more useful for people who expect their phone to act like a portable internet connection.
What about other telecom brands?
Reliance Jio, by comparison, has been more straightforward about its unlimited 5G benefit. On eligible plans, users in True 5G coverage can continue using unlimited 5G data even while sharing the connection through a hotspot, which makes the offer more practical for heavy tethering use. That is one reason Jio’s approach often feels more flexible for users who move data across multiple devices.
Airtel’s move toward 5G SA could still change how it structures services in the future, especially if it pushes more aggressively into fixed wireless access and other home broadband-style offerings. But even that would not automatically settle the hotspot question for regular mobile users. The company may still choose to keep phone plans and home-style usage separate, which means the final shape of the offer could depend more on Airtel’s product strategy than on the network itself.






