Best Internet Providers in Boston, Massachusetts
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CNET recommends Verizon Fios as the top internet provider in Boston, Massachusetts. With 100% fiber-optic coverage, fast symmetrical speeds and plans ranging from $50 to $90, Verizon Fios offers great value, lengthy price guarantees and straightforward service terms. Plus, approximately 80% of Boston households can access its service.
If Verizon Fios isn’t available at your address, Xfinity is the most widely accessible provider, covering 99.5% of households. It offers plans starting at $30 and the fastest download speeds in the city, reaching up to 2,000Mbps in select areas. For those prioritizing price, Astound provides the cheapest option, with plans beginning at $20 per month for speeds up to 300Mbps. Ultimately, your choice depends on coverage and budget.
The ISPs featured above aren't the only options for internet in Boston, but they are the ones I'd recommend most and consider if I were to leave the South for Beantown. Here's a quick comparison of all Boston internet providers, followed by a look at some of the cheapest and fastest plans available in the area.
Provider | Connection type | Monthly price range | Download speed range (Mbps) | Monthly data cap | Contract |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Astound Read full review | Cable | $20-$55 | 300-1,500 | None | None |
T-Mobile Home Internet Read full review | 5G fixed wireless | $50-70 ($35-$55) | 72-245 | None | None |
Verizon 5G Home Internet Read full review | 5G fixed wireless | $50-$70 ($35-$45 with eligible mobile plans) | 50-1,000 | None | None |
Verizon Fios Read full review | Fiber | $50-$90 | 300-940 | None | None |
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There aren't many other options outside our picks for the best ISPs in Boston. Here's a brief look at what to expect from other internet services in the area.
T-Mobile Home Internet: T-Mobile's 5G rollout has been impressive, covering some 50 million homes nationwide, including many in Boston. Pricing is about the same as Verizon's 5G home internet service in Boston, but speeds are likely to be slower.
Service terms are the same (no data caps, equipment fees or contracts), so if you're interested in 5G home internet, you might as well go with the higher speed potential of Verizon. That said, T-Mobile does offer a $15 discount to qualifying mobile customers, so if you fall into that category, T-Mobile Home Internet may be worth considering.
Satellite internet: Hughesnet and Viasat are available nearly everywhere, so they technically are options for home internet in the Boston area. The high-priced, low-data services are best for rural areas, so I'd recommend considering other providers unless you plan on living in a remote cabin on Walden Pond. If so, you'll want to stay there about as long as Thoreau did -- satellite internet from Hughesnet and Viasat comes with a two-year contract.
Boston broadband at a glanceVirtually every household in the Boston area has access to download speeds of 250Mbps or higher and upload speeds of 25Mbps or higher.
The high-speed coverage comes from various sources, including cable internet from Xfinity and Astound and fiber service from Verizon Fios, which is available to approximately 86% of Boston addresses. As a result, Boston residents are likely to have at least two or three but possibly more broadband options to choose from.
Boston internet pricingWith introductory prices of around $20 to $35 per month, depending on your chosen provider and the discounts you qualify for, Boston has some of the lowest prices on high-speed internet anywhere.
Pricing stays competitive even as you get into faster speed tiers. Astound, for example, offers a 300Mbps plan starting at just $20, whereas Xfinity's Gigabit plan advertises speeds up to 1,000Mbps starting at $60 per month.
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You won't find the absolute fastest speeds in Boston. Recent Ookla speed test data places Boston 66th out of the top 100 US cities for its average download speeds, around 222Mbps. (Disclosure: Ookla is owned by the same parent company as CNET, Ziff Davis.) Numerous factors can affect speed test data, such as using a Wi-Fi connection and distance from the router, not to mention a plan's maximum advertised speeds, so the data shouldn't be too much of an indicator of what speeds you can get from your provider.
Provider | Starting price | Max download speed | Max upload speed | Data cap | Connection type |
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Xfinity Gigabit X2 Read full review | $95 | 2,000Mbps | 206Mbps | None | Cable |
Astound 1500 Read full review | $55 | 1,500Mbps | 20Mbps | None | Cable |
Astound 1000 Read full review | $45 | 1,000Mbps | 20Mbps | None | Cable |
Xfinity Gigabit Read full review | $60 | 1,000Mbps | 115Mbps | None | Cable |
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Two or three internet options, plus maybe one or two more in select areas, probably doesn't feel like much, but Boston residents have more choices than most when it comes to home internet service.
While no providers offer multi-gigabit speeds, single-gig service is available from up to five providers. Pricing is competitive, with multiple plans starting at or below $35 per month. Service terms are fair regardless of the provider and plan you choose, as most come with unlimited data and no contract requirements, while some, like Verizon Fios and Starry, up the ante with free equipment as well.
Internet service providers are numerous and regional. Unlike the latest smartphone, laptop, router or kitchen tool, it’s impractical to personally test every ISP in a given city. What’s our approach? We start by researching the pricing, availability and speed information drawing on our own historical ISP data, the provider sites and mapping information from the Federal Communications Commission at FCC.gov.
It doesn’t end there: We go to the FCC’s website to check our data and ensure we’re considering every ISP that provides service in an area. We also input local addresses on provider websites to find specific options for residents. To evaluate how happy customers are with an ISP's service, we look at sources including the American Customer Satisfaction Index and J.D. Power. ISP plans and prices are subject to frequent changes; all information provided is accurate as of the time of publication.
Once we have this localized information, we ask three main questions:
- Does the provider offer access to reasonably fast internet speeds?
- Do customers get decent value for what they're paying?
- Are customers happy with their service?
While the answer to those questions is often layered and complex, the providers who come closest to “yes” on all three are the ones we recommend.
To explore our process in more depth, visit our page on how we test ISPs.
Boston internet FAQscnet