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Toyota and Lexus vehicles will get AT&T 4G LTE Wi-Fi this fall

Toyota's Global Communications Platform partnership with KDDI allows for remote vehicle diagnostics and safety response services.

Steven Ewing Former managing editor
Steven Ewing spent his childhood reading car magazines, making his career as an automotive journalist an absolute dream job. After getting his foot in the door at Automobile while he was still a teenager, Ewing found homes on the mastheads at Winding Road magazine, Autoblog and Motor1.com before joining the CNET team in 2018. He has also served on the World Car Awards jury. Ewing grew up ingrained in the car culture of Detroit -- the Motor City -- before eventually moving to Los Angeles. In his free time, Ewing loves to cook, binge trash TV and play the drums.
Steven Ewing
2 min read
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Toyota vehicles will soon offer better wireless internet and diagnostics tools.

Toyota

Toyota and Lexus vehicles are getting a big upgrade to in-car Wi-Fi  later this year. As part of its CES showing this week, Toyota on Monday announced a partnership with AT&T to bring unlimited data plans and a bunch of vehicle diagnostics and safety assistance systems to a number of the company's products.

Beginning this fall, a number of 2020 model year Toyota and Lexus products will be available with this connectivity tech. Toyota says the Wi-Fi tech will enable owners to "share entertainment among multiple smartphones and tablets from the open road." Furthermore, the AT&T service will allow owners to choose unlimited data plans.

This will replace Toyota's current, Verizon-based Wi-Fi offering, but will not void those existing connectivity plans. "Current vehicle (and owners) are not involved," a Toyota spokesperson told Roadshow. "Once deployed, new vehicles will be equipped with AT&T instead of Verizon ."

Beyond its entertainment capabilities, the Wi-Fi service will allow owners to do things like remotely start and condition the car and send vehicle health information directly to dealers. It'll also offer what Toyota is calling "Safety Connect," where owners can be connected to an emergency response center, 24/7.

Those nonentertainment related, connected-car services are made possible thanks to KDDI. In 2016, Toyota announced a partnership with the Japanese telecom company to roll out data communications modules (DCMs) that work across different cars in different markets. As we reported in 2016, this could eventually lead to a worldwide network of connected Toyota and Lexus vehicles. In a perfect world, anyway.

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