Internet Speed Test in Ohio

Run a Speed Test

Ohio is served by Spectrum, AT&T Fiber, Xfinity, and WideOpenWest. Whether you are on fiber, cable, or DSL, running a speed test tells you how your actual performance compares to what you are paying for.

Internet Providers in Ohio

The main broadband providers serving Ohio are Spectrum, AT&T Fiber, Xfinity, and WideOpenWest. Coverage quality varies significantly depending on whether you are in an urban center or a rural area.

Fiber Internet in Ohio

Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Dayton have the strongest fiber coverage. Ohio has a competitive broadband market in its major cities. Spectrum cable is dominant statewide. AT&T Fiber is expanding in Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati. WideOpenWest serves parts of metro Cleveland and Columbus.

What Speeds to Expect in Ohio

Typical speeds for Ohio residents: 200 Mbps – 1 Gbps on cable or fiber plans. Testing on Ethernet gives you a true baseline—Wi-Fi performance varies by distance from the router and interference from neighboring networks.

  • Best speeds: Fiber connections in metro areas—consistent performance with symmetric upload and download
  • Cable speeds: Fast download but lower upload; can slow during evening peak hours on shared networks
  • Rural speeds: DSL or fixed wireless typically deliver 25–100 Mbps; satellite (Starlink) is an option where wired service is unavailable

Speed Test Tips for Ohio Residents

  • Test on Ethernet to measure your true connection speed, not Wi-Fi overhead
  • Run tests at both off-peak (morning) and peak (evening 7–10 PM) times—cable networks often show 20–40% lower speeds at peak hours
  • Check upload speed separately—upload is the bottleneck for video calls and cloud uploads, not just download
  • If your measured speed is consistently below 80% of your plan speed, contact your ISP or check for modem/router firmware updates

Frequently Asked Questions

What internet providers serve Ohio?

Spectrum cable covers most of Ohio. AT&T Fiber competes in Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati. Xfinity (Comcast) serves parts of the state. WideOpenWest covers some metro areas. Rural Ohio has fewer options.

Is fiber available in Ohio?

Yes, in the major metros. AT&T Fiber covers significant portions of Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati. WideOpenWest offers fiber in some areas. Spectrum is upgrading its cable network in Ohio as well.

What speeds are typical in Ohio?

Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati metro residents get 300–1000 Mbps. Rural Ohio averages 100–300 Mbps from cable or DSL. Ohio ranks near the national average for broadband access.

Which Ohio city has the best internet?

Columbus is often cited as having the strongest broadband competition in Ohio, with AT&T Fiber, Spectrum, and WideOpenWest competing aggressively. Cleveland is also well-served. Smaller cities like Canton and Youngstown have fewer choices.

Cities and Nearby States