Internet Providers by City.
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Independent Buyer ResearchEst. 2024
Internet Providers · Cincinnati, OH · City Guide

Best Internet Providers in Cincinnati, OH

We ranked the providers serving Cincinnati, OH on speed, price and real-world availability — grounded in the FCC map and each provider’s own published plans.

A person on a video call at home
Availability is checked against the FCC map, block by block. Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Unsplash (CC). Illustrative.
Best overall

altafiber (Cincinnati Bell)

Fiber · up to 6 Gig download

altafiber (Cincinnati Bell) tops our Cincinnati, OH ranking on our transparent value score — a blend of top advertised speed, starting price and how widely it serves the metro. Availability varies address to address, so confirm your exact address before you commit.

77
Value score / 100
$45/mo
starting · 2026-07
Serves
in Cincinnati
The Rankings
1

altafiber (Cincinnati Bell)

Fiber · up to 6 Gig · 2 Gig up · Fastest here · Fiber
77
/ 100
$45/mo
starting · 2026-07
2

Spectrum (Charter)

Cable · up to 2 Gig · 1 Gig up · Cheapest here
63
/ 100
$30/mo
starting · 2026-07
3

Viasat

Satellite · up to 150 Mbps
36
/ 100
$40/mo
starting · 2026-07
4

HughesNet

Satellite · up to 100 Mbps · 5 Mbps up
36
/ 100
$40/mo
starting · 2026-07
5

Verizon 5G Home Internet

5G Home · up to 300 Mbps
25
/ 100
see provider
price varies by address
6

Starlink Residential

Satellite · up to 400 Mbps · 20 Mbps up
23
/ 100
$55/mo
starting · 2026-07
7

T-Mobile Home Internet

5G Home · up to 498 Mbps · 55 Mbps up
22
/ 100
$50/mo
starting · 2026-07
8

AT&T Internet Air

5G Home · up to 300 Mbps · 30 Mbps up
11
/ 100
$60/mo
starting · 2026-07
Figure 1

Speed and price, side by side

Max advertised download vs. published starting price · 2026-07
Max download speed Starting price / month
altafiber (Cincinnati Bell)
6 Gig
$45
Spectrum (Charter)
2 Gig
$30
Viasat
150 Mbps
$40
HughesNet
100 Mbps
$40
Verizon 5G Home Internet
300 Mbps
see provider
Starlink Residential
400 Mbps
$55
Max speed is each provider’s top advertised residential tier; price is the lowest cleanly published national starting rate (“see provider” where none is published — never estimated). Speeds/prices from providers’ own plans pages, 2026-07.

The cheapest plan and the fastest plan in a city are rarely the same product, and neither is automatically the smartest buy. Most homes stream, video-call and back up a few devices — a load a 300–500 Mbps plan handles comfortably. Paying for a multi-gigabit tier buys headroom most people never touch.

Availability decides it

The biggest factor is whether a provider actually reaches your address. Fiber and cable footprints are patchy block to block, so always check your exact address before you settle on a plan. Fixed-wireless (5G Home) and satellite options serve almost everywhere but trade away peak speed and consistency.

Figure 2

Who actually reaches the metro

Qualitative availability from the FCC map + provider footprint · not a per-address guarantee
altafiber (Cincinnati Bell) (Fiber)Available
Spectrum (Charter) (Cable)Widely_Available
Viasat (Satellite)Available
HughesNet (Satellite)Available
Verizon 5G Home Internet (5G Home)Limited
Starlink Residential (Satellite)Available
Availability is a qualitative flag grounded in the FCC National Broadband Map (checked 2025-06-30) and each provider’s published coverage — it shows which providers serve the metro, not a coverage percentage and not a guarantee for your exact address. Check your address with the provider.

Our pick for Cincinnati, OH: altafiber (Cincinnati Bell)

Availability and the exact plan vary by address — check before you buy.

How we make money: some "check availability" links may become affiliate links once provider programs are approved; if you sign up through one we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. It never changes our rankings—those are set by the data. Today no affiliate programs are live, so these are plain links to each provider.

The takeaway
Check your address first, take fiber or cable if you can get it, and don’t pay for a gigabit you’ll never use.

For most Cincinnati homes, a mid-tier fiber or cable plan hits the sweet spot of speed, price and reliability. If neither reaches your block, a 5G Home or satellite plan is the sensible fallback.

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