Internet Speed Test in Tennessee

Run a Speed Test

Tennessee is served by Xfinity (Comcast), AT&T Fiber, and Spectrum. 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 Tennessee

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

Fiber Internet in Tennessee

Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, and Chattanooga have the strongest fiber coverage. Tennessee has strong urban broadband, particularly in Nashville. Chattanooga is nationally known for its EPB Fiber, a municipal utility that offers gigabit internet at low prices. AT&T Fiber is expanding across the state.

What Speeds to Expect in Tennessee

Typical speeds for Tennessee 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

ISPs at a glance

ProviderTypical offeringMeasured speed range
Xfinity (Comcast)Fixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)200 Mbps – 1 Gbps
AT&T FiberFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)200 Mbps – 1 Gbps
SpectrumFixed broadband (fiber / cable / DSL depending on address)200 Mbps – 1 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 Tennessee 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 Tennessee?

Xfinity (Comcast) and AT&T Fiber cover Nashville, Memphis, and other major cities. Spectrum serves areas not covered by Xfinity. EPB Fiber Optics covers Chattanooga. Rural TN relies on smaller ISPs and electric cooperative fiber.

Is fiber available in Tennessee?

Yes—AT&T Fiber covers large portions of Nashville and Memphis. Chattanooga's EPB Fiber is a municipal provider offering up to 25 Gbps service. Electric cooperatives across rural TN are deploying fiber with federal funding.

What speeds can Tennessee residents expect?

Nashville and Memphis metro residents get 300 Mbps – 1 Gbps. Chattanooga has exceptional speeds via EPB Fiber. Rural TN averages 100–300 Mbps. Tennessee ranks near the national average for broadband access.

Why is Chattanooga's internet famous?

Chattanooga's EPB (Electric Power Board) became the first US city to deploy a citywide gigabit fiber network in 2010. It now offers service up to 25 Gbps and is consistently cited as a model for municipal broadband. The network is owned by the city's electric utility.

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 Tennessee 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.

Cities and Nearby States

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