Your phone shows 5G in the status bar. The signal looks strong. But when you open an app or browser nothing loads. No internet. You toggle mobile data off and on. Still nothing. Switch to a different app. Same problem.
This is one of the more confusing mobile network problems because the 5G icon showing seems like everything should be working. But displaying a signal and actually having a working data connection are two different things. Your phone can be registered on the 5G network without successfully establishing a data session.
10 specific fixes for 5G showing but no internet on Android. These work on Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel, OnePlus, Xiaomi, and any other Android phone. The fixes are ordered from fastest to most involved most people find their solution in the first four.
Why 5G Shows But No Internet Actually Happens
Understanding why this happens helps you pick the right fix faster. Here are the main causes:
APN settings not configured for 5G: Access Point Name settings tell your phone how to connect to your carrier’s data network. If the APN is wrong or missing 5G-specific parameters, your phone registers on 5G but cannot pass data through.
NSA vs SA 5G issue: Most countries use Non-Standalone (NSA) 5G, which runs 5G radio on top of a 4G core network. If the 4G connection underneath drops or has a problem, the 5G session stops passing data even though the 5G icon stays visible.
Carrier provisioning problem: Your SIM or account may not be fully provisioned for 5G data even if 5G is included in your plan. This is a carrier-side issue that looks identical to a phone-side problem.
Software glitch after a phone update: Android updates sometimes reset network mode preferences or introduce bugs that affect how the phone establishes the 5G data session.
5G band incompatibility: Your phone may connect to a 5G tower for radio but not support the specific 5G frequency band that carrier uses for data in your area.
Quick Fixes: Try These First
These three steps fix the 5G no internet problem for most people immediately:
1. Toggle Airplane Mode: Swipe down > tap Airplane Mode ON > wait 15 seconds > tap it OFF. This drops and re-establishes your entire network connection including the 5G data session.
2. Switch to LTE then back to 5G: Settings > Mobile Network > Preferred Network Type > change to LTE/4G only > wait 30 seconds > change back to 5G/LTE. This forces your phone to re-establish the data session.
3. Restart your phone: Hold power button > Restart. A full restart clears any network session that is stuck in a bad state.
If one of these works, you are done. If not, continue with the detailed fixes below.
Fix 1: Toggle Airplane Mode On and Off
This is always the first thing to try for any mobile data problem. Airplane Mode cuts all wireless connections simultaneously and forces your phone to re-register on the network from scratch when you turn it back off. This re-establishes the data session which is often what is stuck.
Steps:
- Swipe down from the top of your screen to open Quick Settings.
- Tap the Airplane Mode icon it turns orange or the icon changes to indicate it is on.
- Wait 15-20 seconds. Do not tap anything else during this time.
- Tap Airplane Mode again to turn it off.
- Wait for your phone to reconnect to the network the 5G icon should reappear.
- Open a browser or app to test if data is now working.
If data works after this, the fix is done. The problem was a stuck network session. If it stops working again after a few minutes or hours, move to Fix 3 or Fix 4 for a more permanent solution.
Fix 2: Switch Network Mode from 5G to LTE Then Back
This is one of the most effective fixes for 5G showing but no data. Switching to LTE forces your phone to drop the 5G session and establish a fresh 4G data connection. When you switch back to 5G, the phone re-registers on 5G with a clean data session.
On Samsung Galaxy:
- Go to Settings.
- Tap Connections.
- Tap Mobile Networks.
- Tap Network Mode.
- Select LTE/3G/2G (connect automatically) — this switches you to 4G.
- Wait 30 seconds until you see the LTE icon in your status bar.
- Go back and change Network Mode to 5G/LTE/3G/2G.
- Test data — it should now work on 5G.
On Stock Android / Pixel:
- Go to Settings.
- Tap Network and Internet.
- Tap SIMs.
- Tap Preferred Network Type.
- Change to LTE (recommended). Wait 30 seconds.
- Change back to 5G (recommended).
If 5G shows but no internet is a recurring problem, consider leaving the network mode on LTE as a permanent fix. LTE is more stable than 5G in most areas and uses less battery.
Fix 3: Remove and Reinsert Your SIM Card
A SIM card that is not seated properly can cause your phone to show a signal without actually having a working data connection. This is more common than it sounds — especially on phones that have been dropped or if the SIM tray was opened recently.
Steps:
- Turn off your phone completely before removing the SIM.
- Find the SIM tray — usually on the left or top side of the phone.
- Use the SIM ejection tool (or a straightened paperclip) to open the tray.
- Remove the SIM card and look at the gold contacts — check for any dust or corrosion.
- Gently clean the contacts with a dry cloth if needed.
- Reinsert the SIM card and push the tray back in firmly.
- Turn your phone on and wait for it to connect to the network.
- Test data.
If you have a dual SIM phone, make sure the correct SIM is set as the default for mobile data: Settings > Connections > SIM Card Manager > Mobile Data — select the SIM your data plan is on.
Fix 4: Reset APN Settings
APN (Access Point Name) settings are the configuration that tells your phone how to connect to your carrier’s data network. If these are wrong — which can happen after a software update, after switching phones, or if someone manually changed them your phone can show 5G signal but fail to get internet data through.
Steps:
- Go to Settings.
- Tap Connections (Samsung) or Network and Internet (stock Android).
- Tap Mobile Networks.
- Tap Access Point Names.
- Tap the three-dot menu in the top right corner.
- Tap Reset to Default or Reset APNs.
- Confirm the reset.
- Restart your phone.
- Test mobile data.
In most cases, resetting to default restores the correct APN settings from your SIM card automatically. If your carrier requires custom APN settings that are not stored on your SIM, contact your carrier to get the correct APN details.
Fix 5: Update Android and Carrier Settings
Android updates sometimes include fixes for 5G data session issues. Similarly, carriers push carrier settings updates that fix compatibility between your phone and their network. Both are worth checking if 5G data problems started recently.
Update Android:
- Go to Settings > Software Update or About Phone > Software Update.
- Check for updates and install any available.
- Restart your phone after updating.
Check for Carrier Update:
- Some Android phones receive carrier updates alongside software updates — check the update menu.
- On Samsung: Settings > About Phone > Status Information > check if carrier settings version matches what your carrier lists on their website.
- On Pixel: Settings > About Phone > Regulatory Labels — carrier settings info is visible here.
Fix 6: Toggle Mobile Data Off and On
This is slightly different from Airplane Mode. Toggling just mobile data off and on resets only the data connection without dropping calls or SMS. It forces your phone to re-establish the data bearer on the current network — which is often all that is needed.
Steps:
- Swipe down from the top of your screen to open Quick Settings.
- Tap the Mobile Data icon to turn it off.
- Wait 10 seconds.
- Tap Mobile Data again to turn it back on.
- Wait for the 5G icon to reappear and test internet.
Alternatively: Settings > Connections > Mobile Networks > Mobile Data > toggle off, wait 10 seconds, toggle on.
Fix 7: Check If 5G Is Actually Available in Your Area
5G coverage is still limited in many areas, especially in Pakistan and other parts of South Asia. Your phone can show the 5G icon by connecting to a 5G-enabled tower for radio purposes, but if 5G data service is not active in that specific location, you will get no data even though the icon shows.
How to check:
- Go to your carrier’s website and look for their 5G coverage map.
- Enter your location and check if 5G data coverage is shown for your area.
- Try moving to a different location — if 5G data works in a different spot, coverage is the issue at your original location.
- Note the difference between 5G signal coverage (showing the icon) and 5G data coverage (actually delivering internet). Many coverage maps show data coverage specifically.
Jazz 5G: Currently available in limited areas of Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad. Check jazz.com.pk for the coverage map.
Zong 5G: Available in selected areas of major cities. Check zong.com.pk for details.
Fix 8: Contact Your Carrier to Check 5G Provisioning
Even if 5G is included in your plan and you are in a 5G coverage area, your SIM may not be provisioned for 5G data. Provisioning is a carrier-side configuration that activates 5G on your specific account and SIM. Some users get a new SIM or upgrade their plan but the provisioning does not update automatically.
Steps:
- Call your carrier’s customer support.
- Tell them you have 5G signal showing but no data connection.
- Ask them to check if your SIM is provisioned for 5G data.
- Ask them to re-push the provisioning to your SIM — this is a quick backend action they can do remotely.
- After they do this, restart your phone and test.
This fix is especially relevant if you recently upgraded your plan to include 5G or if you got a new SIM. Provisioning updates sometimes take a few hours to apply automatically, but calling support speeds it up.
Fix 9: Clear Settings Cache
The Settings app on Android has its own cache. When this cache is corrupted, it can cause network-related settings to malfunction even when the settings themselves appear correct — the phone reads corrupted cached values instead of the actual settings.
Steps:
- Go to Settings.
- Tap Apps or Application Manager.
- Tap the three-dot menu and select Show System Apps.
- Find Settings in the app list and tap it.
- Tap Storage.
- Tap Clear Cache. Do not tap Clear Data.
- Restart your phone.
- Go back to network settings and check your preferred network mode and APN settings.
Fix 10: Reset Network Settings
Resetting network settings is the most thorough software fix for 5G data problems. It clears all saved network configurations, APN settings, preferred network modes, and connection history — essentially giving your phone a clean start for all network-related functions. This fixes deep configuration issues that individual fixes cannot reach.
On Samsung Galaxy:
- Settings > General Management > Reset > Reset Network Settings.
- Enter your PIN when prompted.
- Tap Reset.
On Stock Android / Pixel:
- Settings > System > Reset Options > Reset Wi-Fi, Mobile and Bluetooth.
- Tap Reset Settings and confirm.
After the reset, your phone restores APN settings from the SIM card automatically. Reconnect to your Wi-Fi networks (you will need your passwords again) and test 5G data.
Network reset clears: all saved Wi-Fi passwords, all Bluetooth pairings, mobile network settings, VPN configurations. Your apps, photos, and personal data are completely safe.
SA vs NSA 5G: Why This Matters for Your Connection
Most people do not know about this difference but it directly explains why 5G can show without data.
NSA 5G (Non-Standalone): This is what most countries and carriers use today. NSA 5G uses 5G for the radio connection but relies on the existing 4G LTE core network to handle data sessions. If anything goes wrong with the underlying 4G connection — even temporarily — the 5G data session breaks while the 5G radio icon stays showing. This is why so many people see 5G but get no internet.
SA 5G (Standalone): This is the newer version where 5G handles everything including the core network. Data sessions are established and managed entirely over 5G. SA 5G is more stable but requires more infrastructure investment and is not yet widely deployed.
If you are on NSA 5G and frequently see 5G signal with no data, the underlying 4G connection is unstable. Switching your preferred network mode to LTE gives you a more stable connection because LTE handles everything without the 5G overlay complication.
Should You Stay on 5G or Switch to LTE?
This is a practical question many people have after dealing with 5G data problems. Here is an honest answer:
Stay on 5G if: You are in a major city with solid 5G SA coverage, you regularly download large files or stream in 4K, and the signal problems happen rarely. The speed benefit is real when 5G works properly.
Switch to LTE if: You frequently see 5G with no data, your battery drains fast (5G uses significantly more power), you are in an area with patchy 5G coverage, or you mostly use your phone for calls, messaging, and social media where the speed difference is invisible.
For most people in Pakistan and South Asia where 5G coverage is limited and NSA 5G is the standard, staying on LTE gives a better day-to-day experience — more stable data, better battery life, and fewer no-internet situations.
Related Articles on MozPK
- 5G Slower Than 4G Android Fix: if 5G works but is slower than your old LTE
- LTE Works But 5G No Internet Android Fix: related network problem
- Mobile Data Not Working Android Fix: if even LTE is not working
- No Service No Signal Android Fix: if the problem is no signal at all
- Android Battery Draining Fast After Update: 5G also drains battery faster
FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why does my Android show 5G signal but no internet?
5G signal showing without internet means your phone is registered on the 5G radio network but the data session failed to establish. The most common causes are a stuck network session (fixed by toggling Airplane Mode), incorrect APN settings, or your carrier not having 5G data provisioned on your account. Toggle Airplane Mode on and off first — this fixes the problem immediately in most cases.
Q: How do I fix 5G connected but no internet on Android?
The fastest fix is to go to Settings > Mobile Network > Preferred Network Type and switch from 5G to LTE only. Wait 30 seconds until you get an LTE icon, then switch back to 5G. This forces your phone to drop and re-establish the data session. If that does not work, reset your APN settings to default from Settings > Mobile Networks > Access Point Names > three-dot menu > Reset to Default.
Q: Is this a phone problem or a carrier problem?
If LTE works perfectly but 5G never has data, it is more likely a carrier provisioning issue — your SIM is not fully set up for 5G data. Call your carrier and ask them to verify and re-push your 5G provisioning. If 5G works sometimes but drops randomly, it is more likely a phone-side software issue. Resetting network settings and keeping the phone’s software updated usually resolves it.
Q: Does resetting APN fix 5G no internet?
Yes, incorrect APN settings are one of the main causes of 5G showing without data. APN settings are what tell your phone how to route data through your carrier’s network. Resetting them to default (Settings > Mobile Networks > Access Point Names > Reset to Default) restores the correct values from your SIM card. Restart your phone after resetting and test.
Q: Why does 5G work in some places but not others?
5G coverage is location-specific. Your phone may connect to a 5G tower in one area for radio purposes but the carrier has not activated 5G data service in that exact location. This is common in areas where carriers are still rolling out 5G. Check your carrier’s coverage map to see where 5G data (not just 5G radio) is available.
Q: Should I just switch back to LTE permanently?
For most users in Pakistan and South Asia where 5G coverage is limited, switching to LTE as default is a practical choice. LTE gives more stable data, better battery life, and fewer no-internet situations. You can always switch back to 5G when you are in an area with solid 5G coverage. Change the setting in Settings > Mobile Networks > Preferred Network Type > LTE/3G/2G.
Conclusion
Seeing 5G but getting no internet is confusing because the network icon looks like everything should work. But the 5G icon only means your phone is connected to a 5G radio tower — it does not mean the data session is working. These are two separate things, which is why the fixes involve forcing a fresh data session rather than fixing signal strength.
For most people, toggling Airplane Mode (Fix 1) or switching network mode from 5G to LTE and back (Fix 2) solves the problem immediately. If it keeps coming back, resetting APN settings (Fix 4) and checking with your carrier on 5G provisioning (Fix 8) are the most effective long-term solutions.
If you are in an area where 5G coverage is patchy and you keep having this problem, switching to LTE as your default network mode gives you a more reliable daily experience the speed difference for most tasks is minimal, but the stability difference is significant. Did one of these fixes get your 5G data working? Leave a comment with your phone model and carrier it helps other reader