Internet Providers by City.
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Independent Buyer ResearchEst. 2024
Broadband Research · Report

The State of U.S. Broadband, 2026

A 40-city, 23-provider look at which internet providers reach American metros, how fast their top tiers really are, and how transparent their pricing is.

Abstract. Across 40 major U.S. cities we tracked 23 major ISPs and 342 city-by-provider availability rows. Fiber and cable top tiers reach multi-gigabit speeds where they are built, while fixed-wireless and satellite cover almost everywhere at lower peak speeds. Pricing transparency remains uneven: only 16 of 23 providers cleanly publish a national starting price — the rest quote by address.

40
U.S. cities analyzed
23
major ISPs tracked
69.6%
of providers publish a starting price
342
city-by-provider rows
Figure 1

Median top advertised speed, by connection type

Median of providers’ MAX advertised download tier · 2026-07
Cable
5 Gig
Fiber
5 Gig
5G Home
300 Mbps
Satellite
150 Mbps
Source: Internet Providers by City dataset — providers’ own published residential plans. “Median top tier” is the median across providers of that type of the fastest tier they advertise; the top tier is not available at every address.

Where you live still decides what you can buy. Fiber and cable deliver the fastest tiers but are built block by block; fixed-wireless (5G Home) and satellite reach almost everywhere but trade away peak speed and consistency. The result is that two households a mile apart can face completely different menus.

Coverage is broad; wireline is uneven

Satellite and 5G-home services appear in every city we studied, which is why they show the widest footprints below. Fiber and cable footprints are concentrated in the incumbents’ build areas — the reason our city rankings weight local availability alongside speed and price.

Figure 2

Widest footprints in our sample

Number of the 40 cities each provider serves · FCC map + provider footprint
T-Mobile Home Internet40 cities
AT&T Internet Air40 cities
Verizon 5G Home Internet40 cities
Starlink Residential40 cities
Viasat40 cities
HughesNet40 cities
AT&T Fiber23 cities
Xfinity (Comcast)18 cities
Spectrum (Charter)17 cities
CenturyLink (Lumen)8 cities
Source: FCC National Broadband Map (Broadband Data Collection, checked 2025-06-30) + each provider’s published coverage. Footprint counts reflect which of our sampled cities a provider serves, not per-address availability.
Aerial view of a city neighborhood
Availability swings block to block as much as city to city. Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Unsplash (CC). Illustrative.
Figure 3

The connection-type mix

City-by-provider rows by connection type
5G Home
120
Satellite
120
Fiber
58
Cable
44
Source: Internet Providers by City dataset. Counts the city-by-provider availability rows of each connection type across the sample.
Key Findings
  • We tracked 23 major ISPs across 40 cities and 342 city-by-provider rows.
  • Fiber and cable deliver the fastest top tiers (multi-gigabit where built); fixed-wireless and satellite trade peak speed for near-universal coverage.
  • Price transparency is uneven: only 16 of 23 providers cleanly publish a national starting price — the rest quote by address, so we mark them “see provider.”
  • Availability, not price, is usually the binding constraint: which providers reach a given address decides most households’ real choice set.
Methodology

Availability is grounded in the FCC National Broadband Map (Broadband Data Collection, 2025-06-30 vintage) and each provider’s own published coverage. Max advertised speeds and connection types are the providers’ own published residential figures (2026-07). National starting prices are carried only where a provider cleanly publishes one — otherwise the value is null and we show “see provider.” We never estimate or fabricate a price. This is an MVP sample of major metros and major national/large-regional ISPs, not a census of every provider or address.

Cite this study

The Broadband Review Research Team (2026). The State of U.S. Broadband, 2026. Internet Providers by City.
https://internetprovidersbycity.com/research/broadband-pricing-2026/

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