Compare Internet Providers in Your Area
Authorized retailer for multiple internet service providers. Enter your ZIP code to compare fiber, cable, and 5G plans available at your address β same published rates as ordering directly.
Independence Notice: Find My Internet Plan is an independent authorized retailer and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an agent of any internet service provider listed on this website. We match standard provider pricing available by phone.
How to find the right internet provider
Choosing an internet provider often feels harder than it should be. Marketing pages quote one price, your actual bill is higher. Coverage looks confirmed online, then a technician shows up and tells you fiber isn't actually wired to your block. Promotional rates expire and you're suddenly paying $30 more per month than when you signed up.
Find My Internet Plan exists to cut through that. We're an independent authorized retailer β we hold real dealer contracts with multiple internet service providers, which means our agents can actually place an order on your behalf at the same published rate you'd pay by calling the provider directly. We are not a lead-generation site that sells your contact info; we are a sales channel that providers compensate when we successfully sign up a customer.
The single most useful thing we do for you is verify availability. When you enter your ZIP code or call our number, our agents check coverage at your specific address across every provider we carry β not just the one whose website you happened to land on first. That's how you find out whether you can actually get fiber, what plan is the right speed for your household size, and what your real after-AutoPay-after-tax bill is going to be.
Connection types
Types of internet service we help compare
Fiber Internet
Fiber is the fastest residential internet technology widely available in the US. Plans typically offer symmetrical upload and download speeds β meaning you can upload as fast as you download β with low latency around 10ms and no data caps on most plans. Speeds commonly range from 300 Mbps to 5 Gbps. Fiber is the right choice for households where multiple people work from home, gamers who need low ping, and anyone uploading large files (video creators, photographers, software developers).
Available to roughly 50% of US households today, with continued buildout in major metros.
Learn more about fiber βCable Internet
Cable internet is the most widely available high-speed option in the US, reaching about 90% of households. Download speeds are competitive with fiber (up to 1.2 Gbps on premium plans), but upload speeds are typically capped between 15 Mbps and 35 Mbps regardless of how much you pay. Latency is around 15β20ms. Cable is best for households focused on streaming and downloading β Netflix, online shopping, browsing β where upload speed matters less.
Available to roughly 90% of US households. Wide-tier plans are common ($40β$80/mo with AutoPay).
Learn more about cable β5G Home Internet
5G fixed wireless home internet uses the same towers that provide 5G mobile service, with a gateway device that ships to your home. No installation appointment, no technician visit, no contract. Speeds typically range from 72 Mbps to 415 Mbps depending on signal strength to the nearest tower, with 30β40ms latency. Best for renters who don't want to schedule installation, households where fiber isn't available, and as a fallback option that can be canceled month-to-month.
Footprint is growing rapidly. Coverage depends on tower proximity and signal quality at your address.
Learn more about 5G βDSL & Satellite
DSL uses the same telephone lines as legacy phone service. Speeds typically max out around 100 Mbps and decrease the further your home is from the provider's central office. Satellite (Starlink, Hughesnet, Viasat) covers areas where wired infrastructure hasn't reached β speeds vary widely (50β250 Mbps), latency is higher than wired connections, and most plans include data caps or prioritization.
DSL and satellite are typically fallback options where fiber, cable, and 5G aren't available.
Nationwide coverage
US internet access at a glance
Federal Communications Commission data on broadband availability across the United States.
91%
of US households have wired broadband coverage with downloads of 25+ Mbps
15%
of populated regions are served by only 1β2 wireline providers
~50%
of US households have fiber-to-the-home availability
~180 Mbps
average residential download speed nationwide
Source: FCC public broadband map and provider-reported data.
How to choose an internet plan
The right internet plan depends on three factors: how many people share your connection, what activities use the most bandwidth, and what's actually available at your address. Most households significantly overestimate how much speed they need β a single person working from home and streaming 4K video genuinely needs 50β100 Mbps reliably, not 500 Mbps.
A useful starting point: a household of four with multiple simultaneous streams, video calls, and a gaming console is well-served by a 200β300 Mbps plan. You only need a gigabit plan if you regularly upload large files (video production, remote server work) or have six-plus heavy users simultaneously. Going too fast on the spec sheet doesn't translate to a noticeably better experience β but it does translate into a $30 to $50 higher monthly bill.
The other factor is connection type. If you work from home and rely on video calls, prioritize fiber if it's available at your address, because cable's slow upload speeds will hurt call quality. If you mostly stream and browse, cable is more than adequate. If you're renting and want zero commitment, 5G home internet is no-contract and ships to your door β set up takes 15 minutes.
The last 5% of decision is price after AutoPay, taxes, and fees. Quoted online prices almost always require AutoPay enrollment, exclude taxes (which add $5β15/month depending on location), and may exclude equipment rental ($10β15/month). When our agents quote you a plan, they tell you the all-in monthly bill you should expect.
Areas we serve
Browse internet providers by state
FAQs
Frequently asked questions
How does Find My Internet Plan compare internet providers? βΎ
We are an independent authorized retailer with dealer agreements with multiple internet service providers. When you enter your ZIP code, we surface the providers and plans that operate in your city or state. Our agents check actual availability at your specific address before placing any order. We do not invent or speculate about coverage β every plan we discuss with you is one our agents can actually order on your behalf.
What types of internet are available in my area? βΎ
Most US households have at least one of: fiber internet (fastest, lowest latency, available in roughly half of US homes), cable internet (most widely available, fast download with slower upload), 5G fixed wireless home internet (newest option, no installation appointment required, available in growing footprint), or DSL/satellite (typically the fallback in rural areas). Use our ZIP search or call our agents to find out which types are available at your specific address.
Is fiber internet always the best choice? βΎ
Fiber is technically the strongest connection type β symmetrical upload and download speeds, lower latency than cable or 5G, and typically no data caps. But fiber is only the right choice if it has been built to your address. If fiber isn't available, modern cable internet (1 Gbps download speeds) or 5G home internet (typically 100β400 Mbps with no installation needed) are both solid alternatives.
What is the difference between download and upload speeds? βΎ
Download speed is how fast data comes to your device β streaming video, loading websites, receiving files. Upload speed is how fast data goes from your device β video calls, uploading files, live streaming, cloud backups. Cable internet has fast download but slow upload (typically 15β35 Mbps regardless of plan tier). Fiber has equal download and upload on every plan. If anyone in your household works remotely, video calls, or uploads large files, low upload speed will be noticeable.
Does the price I see online include taxes and fees? βΎ
Almost never. Most advertised internet prices: (1) require AutoPay enrollment with a bank account or debit card, (2) exclude federal, state, and local taxes (typically $5β$15/mo additional), and (3) may exclude equipment rental ($10β$15/mo with cable providers). When our agents quote you a plan, they tell you both the AutoPay price and the without-AutoPay price, plus an estimate of taxes and fees for your area.
How are you compensated? βΎ
We are compensated by internet service providers when a customer signs up through us. This compensation does not change the price you pay β we sell at the same published rate as the provider's own website or sales line. We are an independent business and do not receive special discounts or unique pricing from any provider. See our Advertising Disclosure for full details.
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