Internet Speed Test in the United States

Run a Speed Test

The US is served by Xfinity (Comcast), AT&T Fiber, Spectrum, Verizon Fios, Cox, Google Fiber, and many regional ISPs. Run a speed test to measure your actual download, upload, ping, and jitter — and see how your results compare to what your ISP promises.

Internet Providers in the United States

The US broadband market is dominated by a handful of large cable and fiber providers. Xfinity (Comcast) has the widest residential footprint. AT&T Fiber covers most major metros with gigabit plans. Spectrum (Charter) serves the Southeast, Midwest, and western US. Verizon Fios provides fiber in the Northeast. Cox Communications serves the South and Southwest. Google Fiber operates in select cities with very competitive pricing.

What Speeds to Expect in the US

Typical measured speeds for US residents: 100 Mbps – 2 Gbps depending on your ISP and plan. Fiber users (AT&T Fiber, Verizon Fios, Google Fiber) typically see 500 Mbps – 2 Gbps. Cable users (Xfinity, Spectrum, Cox) typically see 200–800 Mbps. For the true ISP-side number, test over Ethernet; Wi-Fi introduces a separate stack of variables (signal strength, channel congestion, client radio) that can skew results by 10–30%.

  • Fiber-to-the-home: symmetric by design, lowest jitter, and the most reliable under real-world load
  • Coax, copper, and fixed-wireless: competitive download figures, but upload and peak-time performance vary by neighborhood and time of day
  • What "good" looks like: a wired test in the 80–95% range of your advertised speed, with upload in the same ballpark your plan promises

Speed Test Tips for US Residents

  • Test on Ethernet to establish a baseline without Wi-Fi interference
  • Run tests at both morning (off-peak) and evening (peak) hours — cable networks often slow significantly during prime time
  • Check upload speed, not just download — upload is the limiting factor for video calls, live streaming, and cloud backup
  • Run 3+ consecutive tests and note the minimum — your calls happen at real-time, not average performance

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the major internet providers in the US?

Xfinity (Comcast), AT&T Fiber, Spectrum (Charter), Verizon Fios, Cox Communications, and Google Fiber are among the largest US ISPs. Coverage varies by region — Verizon Fios serves the Northeast, Cox serves the Southeast and Southwest, and Xfinity has the widest national footprint.

What internet speeds are typical in the US?

US residents on fiber (AT&T Fiber, Verizon Fios, Google Fiber) typically get 500 Mbps – 2 Gbps. Cable subscribers (Xfinity, Spectrum, Cox) typically see 200–800 Mbps. The national average is around 150–250 Mbps with significant urban-rural variation.

Is fiber internet available across the US?

Fiber is widely available in most major US cities and suburbs. AT&T Fiber has the widest residential fiber footprint. Verizon Fios covers much of the Northeast. Google Fiber operates in select cities. Rural areas often have limited fiber and may rely on cable, DSL, or satellite (Starlink).

How does US broadband compare to other countries?

The US ranks mid-tier globally. South Korea and Japan have faster average speeds at lower prices. However, major US cities with Google Fiber or Verizon Fios have excellent options. The main issues are rural coverage gaps and pricing higher than comparable international markets.

How we measure

The speed ranges and ISP notes on this page combine publicly reported provider information with wired Ethernet tests run through SpeedTestHQ from the United States and comparable markets. Figures are directional, not a guarantee — your actual results depend on your specific plan, address, router, and time of day. See our accuracy methodology.

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