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AT&T will let you send photos and videos to 911 starting October 2025

AT&T’s ESInet will soon support secure picture and video messaging to 911, transforming how emergencies are reported and handled.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 24, 2025, 12:35 PM EDT
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AT&T is dialing up its 911 game in a big way—soon, you’ll be able to snap a photo or shoot a quick video and have it land right in the hands of your local emergency dispatchers. Think of it as sending an “SOS selfie” instead of fumbling through complicated menus or leaving dispatch wondering what they’re walking into. Starting in October 2025, AT&T’s ESInet platform (that’s the fiber-powered, next-gen backbone for 911 calls) will let AT&T Mobility customers send multimedia messages—just as easily as you’d text your best friend—directly to supported 911 centers.

Behind the scenes, today’s 911 centers still lean on analog lines that can choke on data. ESInet replaces those legacy connections with sturdy, fiber-based IP networks, shaving precious seconds off call routing and improving reliability. Since its 2018 debut, AT&T says over 1,700 emergency call centers—covering more than 75 million people—have already flipped the switch to this IP-powered system. Now, adding pictures and video is the next logical step: dispatchers will see exactly what you see, whether that’s the aftermath of a car crash, a house fire’s smoke plume, or the condition of a loved one in distress.

Let’s be real: loading up a picture in an actual emergency can feel like threading a needle. Right now, you’d need to leap through hoops, figure out if the PSAP even has the right tech, maybe email or upload to a portal—definitely not user-friendly. But come October, AT&T customers with ESInet-enabled dispatch centers will hit “attach” in their messaging app, snap or choose a photo/video, and hit send. The multimedia bits will zip over the same robust network as your text, and show up on the dispatcher’s screen like any other 911 transcript. Even better, this feature is built on open standards so other carriers can plug in—no more silos if Verizon or T-Mobile get on board later.

Security isn’t an afterthought, either. AT&T is rolling out dedicated private internet connections for dispatchers to pull down cloud-hosted public safety data—think building blueprints, medical records, or hazardous-materials info—without worrying about eavesdroppers. These private links isolate emergency data from the public internet, adding a layer of cyber-protection for the very info that first responders depend on. According to Matt Walsh, AVP of FirstNet and NextGen 9-1-1 Products at AT&T, “Public safety is our top priority … by providing a dedicated, secure connection to leading cloud providers, we are enhancing PSAPs’ ability to deliver fast, effective emergency responses while safeguarding against cyber threats.”

And if you’re a road-warrior in a 2026 Toyota, your car might soon join the conversation too. Select 2026 Toyota models sporting an AT&T Connected Car SIM will automatically beam crash-zone data—airbag deployment, impact severity, even GPS coordinates—straight to ESInet-enabled PSAPs. No fumbling for your phone when moments count. This integration leverages Intrado’s Automatic Crash Notification service under the hood, stitching vehicle telematics right into the emergency network. First responders can roll with the full picture before hitting the sirens.

This update rides on a broader push: the National Emergency Number Association (NENA) and the FCC have been prodding carriers and local governments to advance Next Generation 9-1-1 for years. The FCC’s recent proposals aim to nail down reliability and interoperability rules for NG911, ensuring that text, video, and data roll out uniformly across states. AT&T’s ESInet work is a tangible response, showing how carriers can lead the charge rather than lag behind legacy gear.

What does this mean for you, the everyday phone-wielding public? Picture this: you’re hiking alone, witness a hiker slip off a trail—your call places rescuers on standby; your quick video shows the exact drop-off, the injury, and the terrain. Or imagine reporting a gas leak: a live clip of a hissing valve pinpoints the danger before you even dial. The richer context transforms 911 from a one-way voice line into a two-way multimedia channel, empowering dispatchers with real-time visuals and data to make sharper judgments.

Of course, there will be growing pains. PSAPs must upgrade their screens, train dispatchers to interpret images, and beef up storage for multimedia records. But with 1,700 centers already on ESInet, the infrastructure hurdle is more than half behind us. And as other carriers jump on board, interoperability will ensure that “picture-to-911” isn’t an AT&T exclusive trick but a new baseline expectation for emergency services nationwide.

Starting October 2025, sending a picture or video to 911 could be as natural as sharing vacation snaps—except way more critical. It’s a landmark step in public safety tech, one that blends everyday smartphone habits with lifesaving dispatch protocols. So next time you see something alarming, you won’t just tell on it—you’ll show it, and that could make all the difference.


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