Cable vs. Fiber Internet: How the Two Top Techs Compare
Cable and fiber connections are the best choices for speed and reliability, but which is better? Here's a look at what separates the two technologies.
Cable and fiber internet connections are faster, more reliable and often a better value than you'll get with fixed wireless, satellite and DSL service.
But when it comes to cable versus fiber internet, there's no question that fiber is the superior technology. Fiber-optic lines can deliver faster download and symmetrical upload speeds using the speed of light with greater reliability and less vulnerability to network congestion than coaxial cables.
Technology aside, there are times when cable internet is the more practical service, particularly when it comes to availability, introductory pricing and internet bundle options.
Locating local internet providers
In this comparison of cable versus fiber internet, we’ll take a look at how the technologies stack up and what you can generally expect from the providers.
Coaxial internet cables vs. fiber-optic internet cables
The difference between cable and fiber internet starts with how the service reaches your home.
Locating local internet providers
Cable internet uses coaxial cables, the same ones that bring cable TV to your home. These cables consist of a solid or woven copper wire surrounded by insulating and protective sheathings. The cables are an effective means for transmitting various signals, including those for your internet connection, but signal strength and quality can lessen with distance, interference and network congestion.
Fiber internet uses thin glass strands called fiber-optic cables to carry data, such as your internet service, via light signals. The technology can carry greater amounts of data at faster speeds than coaxial cables and is also better equipped to retain signal strength and quality over long distances, like across the ocean.
The downside of fiber-optic cables is that they are more expensive than coaxial cables, and laying new lines is a logistical challenge. As a result, cable internet boasts far greater availability than fiber.
Let's get into some of the details of fiber internet and cable internet and the benefits, drawbacks and affordability of both.
Cable vs. fiber quick comparison
Internet type | Connection | Starting monthly price | Download speed range | Upload speed range | Nationwide availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cable | Coaxial cable | $15-$120 | 100-2,000Mbps | 10-200Mbps | 82% |
Fiber | Fiber-optic cable | $20-$900 | 100-50,000Mbps | 100-50,000Mbps | 43% |
Cable internet pros
- Availability: Approximately 82% of US households are serviceable for broadband speeds of 100 megabits per second down and 20Mbps up.
- Low cost: Cable providers may have the cheapest introductory rates on home internet.
- Versatility: Cable modems can typically be set up anywhere in the home, which may allow for a better Wi-Fi connection.
Cable internet cons
- Speeds: Cable internet doesn’t match the download speed potential of fiber, and upload speeds are significantly slower.
- Network congestion: Peak usage times can result in slower speeds to the home.
- Fine print: This is provider-specific, but with cable internet, you’re more likely to encounter price hikes, data caps, equipment fees and contracts.
Fiber internet pros
- Speeds: Fiber is the fastest internet connection type, and upload speeds can match download speeds.
- Reliability: Fiber-optic lines are less susceptible to network congestion and interference.
- Value: Compared to cable, fiber plans often have a lower cost per Mbps, along with fewer fees and price hikes.
Fiber internet cons
- Availability: Less than half of US residences are serviceable for fiber internet, according to recent data from the Federal Communications Commission.
- Pricing: Fiber internet may have a higher starting price than cable internet.
- Bundling: Few fiber providers also offer TV or other home services, limiting the availability of internet bundles.
Cable vs. fiber internet availability
You’re nearly twice as likely to be serviceable for cable internet than fiber internet. Cable connections are available to more than 82% of US households, whereas fiber coverage lands around 43%, according to the FCC.
Both cable and fiber providers largely operate in urban and suburban areas, but cable often provides more broad and consistent coverage throughout a given location. Fiber availability is limited to select areas in a city, and serviceability may vary from one neighborhood to the next.
My hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina, is a good example. The main local cable provider, Spectrum, is available to 93% of the city’s residential addresses. Two major fiber ISPs, AT&T Fiber and Google Fiber, serve the area, but only around 60% of Charlotte addresses are serviceable for fiber internet.
Top 5 cable internet providers by availability
Top 5 fiber internet providers by availability
If you’re shopping for cable or fiber internet, you may encounter one or more of the providers above. Then again, there are hundreds of regional and hyper-local cable and fiber internet providers across the US. The available providers in your area will play a role in how much your internet costs, what speeds you can get and other service conditions.
Cable vs. fiber plans and pricing
Plan selection and pricing will vary by provider, but cable is commonly the best source of cheap internet, at least for the first year or two of service. Cable providers such as Astound, WOW and Xfinity, for example, have introductory rates as low as $20 to $25 a month for download speeds ranging from 150 to 300Mbps.
Fiber internet is available for $20 to $30 a month -- Ziply Fiber and Frontier Fiber offer 100Mbps ($20) and 200Mbps ($30) plans, respectively -- but, for the most part, expect to pay at least $40 to $50 monthly for service. AT&T Fiber, Quantum Fiber and Verizon Fios are $50 to $55 per month in most locations, while Google Fiber’s cheapest plan starts at $70.
Cheap cable internet plans
Plan | Starting price | Max download speed | Cost per Mbps | Equipment fee |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mediacom Xtream Connect Read full review | $15 | 100Mbps | 15 cents | $14 (optional) |
Astound Broadband 300 Read full review | $20 | 300Mbps | 7 cents | $15 (optional) |
Xfinity Connect Read full review | $20 | 150Mbps | 13 cents | $15 (optional) |
WOW Internet 300 Read full review | $30 | 300Mbps | 10 cents | None |
Optimum 300 Read full review | $40 | 300Mbps | 13 cents | None |
Sparklight Connect 100 Read full review | $40 | 100Mbps | 40 cents | $13 (optional) |
Cox Go Fast Internet | $50 | 100Mbps | 50 cents | None |
Spectrum Internet Read full review | $50 | 500Mbps | 10 cents | $10 router (optional) |
Source: CNET analysis of provider data
Cheap fiber internet plans
Plan | Starting price | Max download speed | Cost per Mbps | Equipment fee |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ziply Fiber 100/100 | $20 | 100Mbps | 20 cents | $12 (optional) |
Frontier Fiber 200 Read full review | $30 | 200Mbps | 15 cents | None |
Metronet 100 Read full review | $30 | 100Mbps | 30 cents | None |
Altafiber Fioptics 100 | $35 | 100Mbps | 35 cents | $12 (optional) |
Kinetic Fiber 300 | $40 | 300Mbps | 13 cents | $11 (optional) |
Brightspeed Fiber 200 | $50 | 200Mbps | 25 cents | None |
Quantum Fiber 500 | $50 | 500Mbps | 10 cents | None |
Verizon Fios 300 Read full review | $50 | 300Mbps | 17 cents | None |
Source: CNET analysis of provider data
Choosing the cheapest internet plan from a cable or fiber provider often means accepting the slowest speeds. As you get into faster speed tiers -- 500Mbps to 1,000Mbps, or 1 gigabit per second -- pricing is a bit more evenly matched, although cable may still have the advantage, depending on the provider.
In select areas, Astound, Spectrum, WOW and other cable ISPs have lower introductory pricing on gig service than you’ll find with most fiber providers. Just keep in mind that while cable internet’s low pricing is tempting, it may not last long.
Consider introductory and standard pricing
Cable internet may start out cheaper, but many providers have steep price increases after the first year or two. Depending on the plan you choose, Astound, Mediacom and Xfinity rates can increase by $30 to $50 or more once the introductory pricing expires.
Monthly pricing is a bit more stable with fiber internet. AT&T Fiber has no set price increases after 12 months, Verizon Fios offers a price guarantee of two to four years and Quantum Fiber will lock in your monthly rate for as long as you keep your plan.
When comparing cable and fiber internet providers, be sure to evaluate introductory and standard rates. If you go with cable for the cheaper initial pricing, keep an eye on your bill and be ready to switch internet providers when the promotional pricing period ends.
Cable vs. fiber internet speeds
Like pricing, available speeds will vary by provider, but download speeds will probably be faster with fiber. Upload speeds will definitely be faster.
Most cable and fiber internet providers offer download speeds up to a gig. A few cable ISPs offer speeds higher than a gig -- Astound goes up to 1.5Gbps, WOW has a 1.2Gbps plan and Xfinity stretches to 2Gbps in select areas -- but a single gig is typically the standard max for cable.
With fiber internet, it’s not uncommon to have a single gig speed tier, plus multi-gigabit plans with speeds of 2Gbps, 5Gbps, 8Gbps or higher available. Ziply Fiber offers the fastest home internet plan I’ve encountered with maximum speeds of 50Gbps, or 50,000Mbps.
Fastest cable internet plans
Plan | Starting price | Max download speed | Max upload speed |
---|---|---|---|
Cox Go Beyond Fast Read full review | $150 | 2,000Mbps | 100Mbps |
Xfinity Gigabit X2 Read full review | $120 | 2,000Mbps | 200Mbps |
WOW 1.2 Gig Read full review | $90 | 1,200Mbps | 50Mbps |
Spectrum Internet Gig Read full review | $70 | 1,000Mbps | 35Mbps |
Optimum 1 Gig Read full review | $80 | 1,000Mbps | 35Mbps |
Mediacom Xtreme 1 Gig Read full review | $65 | 1,000Mbps | 50Mbps |
Sparklight Connect Gig Read full review | $60 | 940Mbps | 50Mbps |
Astound 1500 Read full review | $55 | 1,500Mbps | 50Mbps |
Source: CNET analysis of provider data
Fastest fiber internet plans
Plan | Starting price | Max download speed | Max upload speed |
---|---|---|---|
Ziply Fiber 50 Gig | $900 | 50,000Mbps | 50,000Mbps |
Google Fiber 8 Gig Read full review | $150 | 8,000Mbps | 8,000Mbps |
Quantum Fiber 8 Gig | $165 | 8,000Mbps | 8,000Mbps |
AT&T Fiber 5 Gig Read full review | $245 | 5,000Mbps | 5,000Mbps |
Frontier Fiber 5 Gig Read full review | $130 | 5,000Mbps | 5,000Mbps |
Metronet 5 Gig Read full review | $110 | 5,000Mbps | 5,000Mbps |
Verizon Fios 2 Gig Read full review | $110 | 2,300Mbps | 1,500Mbps |
Kinetic 2 Gig | $100 | 2,000Mbps | 2,000Mbps |
Source: CNET analysis of provider data
Notice that with cable internet plans, upload speeds are significantly slower than downloads. That’s not necessarily a big deal as upload speeds play less of a role in our internet use (my colleague, Joe Supan, notes that his cable upload speeds are more than enough). Still, it’s something to consider when evaluating cable versus fiber internet services.
Cable vs. fiber additional considerations
Price and speed are the two most important factors when choosing an internet provider, but that’s not all you will want to take into account. Fees and contracts can have an impact on your satisfaction as a customer. Again, these things are more provider-specific than the technology, but I find fiber to be more favorable.
Equipment, data caps and contracts
Equipment rental fees can easily add $10 to $15 to your monthly bill, perhaps more if you have a mesh system with multiple pods. Select cable and fiber providers include equipment rental at no extra cost, but the scale tilts more to fiber.
Astound offers free equipment rental. Xfinity may include free equipment with select plans, in select areas. Spectrum includes a free modem lease, but renting a router for Wi-Fi will add $10 to your monthly internet cost if you go with the 500Mbps plan. Cox, Mediacom and others may charge $13 to $15 to rent a gateway router.
In contrast, AT&T Fiber, Frontier Fiber, Google Fiber, Quantum Fiber and Verizon Fios, among others, offer free equipment rental.
The only potential downside to fiber is that you may be limited as to where you can put your router. Most homes wired for fiber have an installed ONT (the fiber version of a modem) that may not be in the best location for a router. My ONT, for instance, is hidden behind a closet panel, so my router unfortunately sits in a coat closet.
As for data caps and contracts, fiber providers are again generally more favorable. Nearly all fiber providers I have come across offer unlimited data and few require a contract. Cable ISPs, on the other hand, are more likely to hold you to a data cap and contract with the threat of speed throttling or added fees.
Customer satisfaction favors fiber
One last provider-specific, cable-to-fiber comparison here, but it is one worth noting as it gives insight to how actual customers feel about their service. In the latest American Customer Satisfaction Index report, major fiber providers scored higher than the big cable ISPs.
All named fiber providers (with the exception of Optimum, which is mostly a cable ISP and is notorious for low customer satisfaction), scored above 70/100. The closest cable providers, Cox and Spectrum, came in at 68/100. Granted, the ACSI categorizes fiber and non-fiber providers separately, but I would assume they are evaluated the same.
Another source we like to use for customer satisfaction data, J.D. Power, paints a similar picture. In its 2024 report, a fiber provider led in all four markets: Verizon (East), Google Fiber (South) and AT&T (North Central, West).
Cable vs. fiber internet recap
Cable internet has its advantages -- availability, low introductory pricing, better bundling options -- but fiber is the superior connection type. Fiber internet is capable of faster speeds, up and down, and is better suited to consistently deliver those speeds, even during peak usage times. Depending on the available ISPs in your area, fiber may be a bit more expensive, but the overall value can’t be beat.
Cable vs. fiber FAQs
Is switching from cable to fiber worth it?
That depends on your needs and the available providers in your area. Fiber is a superior technology, with faster speeds and better reliability than cable, but there’s no need to pay extra for it if your current cable plan meets your needs. If your local fiber provider offers a plan comparable to your cable service, the fiber connection may provide better speed consistency.
Is Wi-Fi faster with fiber internet?
The connection type, such as fiber, affects the speeds to your home. Speeds in your home, specifically over Wi-Fi, are more dependent on your router and the connected devices than the internet type. Fiber is the most reliable internet connection type when it comes to delivering fast, consistent speeds to your home, which may result in faster and more stable Wi-Fi speeds in your home.
Is cable or fiber internet cheaper?
Cable internet providers like Astound, Mediacom, WOW and Xfinity have some of the lowest introductory rates of any major ISP with service starting at $15 to $20 a month in some locations. Starting monthly rates for fiber providers typically run from $40 to $55, though $20 and $30 plans are available from select providers.
It’s important to consider more than the advertised monthly rate when shopping for cheap internet. Some cable internet providers appear to be cheap, but added costs such as equipment fees, data overages and built-in price hikes can inflate the cost over time. After evaluating all costs, fiber may prove to be the better value.
Is cable or fiber internet better for gaming?
Along with faster speeds and better reliability, fiber internet is likely to have a lower latency, or ping, than cable internet. Either technology will offer plenty of speed to game online, but the lower ping that comes with fiber will make for a better gaming experience.