Internet Speed Test in Austin, TX

Run a Speed Test

Austin, TX is served by AT&T Fiber, Google Fiber, Spectrum, and Xfinity. 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 Austin, TX

The main broadband providers in Austin, TX are AT&T Fiber, Google Fiber, Spectrum, and Xfinity. Austin is one of the best-connected cities in Texas. AT&T Fiber covers most of the city. Google Fiber has strong Austin coverage (Austin was its second launch market in 2013). Spectrum and Xfinity compete as cable options.

What Speeds to Expect in Austin, TX

Austin's tech industry and the presence of Google Fiber have created intense ISP competition. This drives better pricing and faster speeds compared to Texas cities without Google Fiber. The influx of tech workers has made Austin one of the highest-demand broadband markets in Texas.

Typical measured speeds for Austin, TX residents: 500 Mbps – 2 Gbps. A wired Ethernet test strips out Wi-Fi variance and shows what your line actually delivers — Wi-Fi alone can understate or inflate your true speed by 10–30%.

  • Fiber plans deliver equal upload/download and hold up best during peak hours
  • Cable, DSL, and mobile broadband typically advertise download speed but lag on upload and during evening congestion
  • Reality check: expect 80–95% of your plan speed on a wired test; if you're consistently lower, it's a real issue worth reporting

ISPs at a glance

ProviderTypical offeringMeasured speed range
AT&T FiberFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)500 Mbps – 2 Gbps
Google FiberFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)500 Mbps – 2 Gbps
SpectrumFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)500 Mbps – 2 Gbps
XfinityFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)500 Mbps – 2 Gbps

Measured speeds are wired-test ranges observed across consumer plans; actual figures depend on plan tier, address, and time of day. Always check each ISP's address-level availability tool for accurate plan and pricing information.

Speed Test Tips for Austin, TX 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 internet providers serve Austin?

AT&T Fiber, Google Fiber, Spectrum, and Xfinity all compete in Austin. AT&T and Google Fiber both cover large portions of the city with gigabit fiber. Spectrum and Xfinity are cable alternatives.

Is Google Fiber available in Austin?

Yes—Google Fiber has served Austin since 2013 (its second US market after Kansas City). Coverage spans much of the city. Check Google Fiber's website with your address. Expansion continues in outer Austin neighborhoods.

What speeds can Austin residents expect?

Google Fiber and AT&T Fiber both deliver up to 2 Gbps. Cable options from Spectrum or Xfinity deliver 300–800 Mbps. Austin consistently ranks as one of the better-connected cities in the South.

How has Google Fiber changed Austin internet prices?

Google Fiber's entry in 2013 pushed AT&T to upgrade to fiber and drop pricing to remain competitive. Spectrum and Xfinity similarly improved their offerings. The result is that Austin residents pay less for gigabit fiber than comparable Texas cities without Google Fiber competition.

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 Austin, TX 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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