Internet providers in Osceola County, Florida
Search residential internet by street address or ZIP code in the tool below. Availability is tied to your service location—not only the county name.
Osceola County includes 2 places in our utility dataset (each can have different ISP footprints). From the Panhandle to the Space Coast, broadband is hyper-local: the same county can include municipal utilities for water while internet is still address-level coax, fiber, or wireless. Your electric utility (Kissimmee Utility Authority (KUA)) is separate from broadband; ISPs market independently by address. Representative city context: Kissimmee.
Best internet providers in Osceola County, FL (quick summary)
Osceola ties Kissimmee’s municipal utilities world to the US-192 tourism corridor and Poinciana growth rings. FCC rows merge Kissimmee’s sample with St. Cloud in our dataset—St. Cloud’s OUC electric context differs from Kissimmee’s KUA footprint even though both sit in the same county.
- Fiber:
- Quantum Fiber (Fiber) — up to 8 Gbps download in FCC rows at our Kissimmee sample.
- Cable:
- Xfinity (Cable) — up to 1.2 Gbps download in FCC rows at the sampled point.
- Rural / wireless:
- Verizon (Fixed Wireless); Starlink (Satellite) — typical toward eastern pasture lots and low-density county roads.
Typical speeds: Merged FCC samples for modeled cities in Osceola County top out around 8 Gbps reported download—seasonal tourism can stress shared plant in corridor ZIPs.
Check internet providers available at your exact address
Results are specific to the address or ZIP you enter. Promotions, equipment fees, and taxes can change the out-the-door total—review checkout details carefully.
Utility Rates may earn a commission when you use this tool. The widget includes the partner's own advertiser disclosure; see also our privacy policy (third-party tools).
Best providers by category
Framed for common search intent—always confirm pricing and serviceability in the tool for your exact address.
Best for speed
Quantum Fiber (Fiber) leads merged filings at our sample—Quantum Fiber (Fiber) — up to 8 Gbps download. Short-term-rental routers and resort Wi-Fi may still mask weak in-unit wiring.
Best for Poinciana & eastern fringe
Special districts and long county roads may skew toward fixed wireless in FCC merges—verify pedestal distance before trenching commitments.
Best budget option
Intro coax and prepaid fixed wireless often post the lowest sticker—watch equipment rental and autopay clauses common in seasonal markets.
Coverage snapshot: Osceola County
Osceola behaves like two utility worlds—FCC rows merge cities.json samples (location method):
- Kissimmee & US-192 hospitality corridor: Strong wireline filings in many samples; STR clusters may overload consumer routers even when curb plant is fast.
- St. Cloud & Lake Nona–adjacent growth: Electric territory can shift between KUA and OUC—ISP maps still require a full street address check.
- Poinciana & southern planned units: New fiber announcements and HOA architectural rules can lag—re-check filings quarterly during build-out.
How to read the comparison tool alongside this page
- Address-level results can differ from summaries. Anything we describe for Osceola County—including FCC research below—is not a substitute for what the tool returns when you enter your full address. Treat summaries as orientation, not a quote.
- Confirm with the ISP before you order. Serviceability, installation timelines, equipment rental, and final pricing are determined by the provider after a qualified check.
- FCC data and shopping tools measure different things. FCC filings describe reported availability at sample coordinates; the embedded tool is retail comparison.
Local context for Osceola County
- County lines do not equal ISP footprints. Osceola County may include competing wireline networks—or pockets where only one option exists in filings. Always run the tool for the exact service location.
- Fiber and cable are common where infrastructure supports them. Florida’s IOU footprint is dominated by Florida Power & Light (FPL) in many coastal counties, but internet competition follows cable franchises and fiber overbuilds—not the electric meter. Hurricanes, HOAs, and seasonal housing can all change what installers will do on a given lot.
- HOAs and apartments can add rules. Multi-family buildings sometimes have exclusive wiring agreements. If results look limited, ask the property manager which ISPs can install service.
Technology labels you may see in results
The partner tool groups offers by technology. You will typically encounter cable (coax), fiber (FTTH), DSL, fixed wireless, and satellite. Each has different speed profiles and latency—compare upload speeds and any data caps if you have heavy usage.
Cross-check with the FCC National Broadband Map
Search your home on the FCC National Broadband Map for provider-reported coverage at your address. See how we use FCC data below for our county merge methodology versus the shopping tool above.
How we use FCC broadband data
This section explains how we summarize FCC provider filings for Osceola County, Florida. We merge samples from city coordinates in our dataset—not a single county centroid and not address-level shopping quotes.
For each incorporated place in our data with coordinates, we query the FCC National Broadband Map API for residential filings, then combine rows across those points (keeping the strongest reported download when the same provider+technology appears in multiple cities). The tables below reflect that merged index, not live pricing or countywide percent coverage.
FCC data is provider-reported and may lag new construction, while shopping-tool results can vary by address, promotion, and provider eligibility. We use FCC data for technology and availability context, not final pricing.
Internet providers submit updated broadband availability to the FCC on a semiannual schedule—filing deadlines are typically March 1 and September 1 (or the next business day). Even after the FCC publishes a new dataset, filings can trail fiber overbuilds, new subdivisions, and retired copper plant by months.
What merged samples show
- FCC sample locations
- 2
- Kissimmee, St. Cloud
- Distinct provider names
- 12
- 13 merged provider+technology rows (duplicates across cities collapsed)
- Fastest reported download
- up to 8 Gbps
- Across all sample points
- Satellite in merge
- Yes
- Starlink, Viasat Inc, HughesNet
For background research (not a shopping quote), we merge static samples from the FCC’s National Broadband Map API at the latitude and longitude we store for each incorporated place in Osceola County in our dataset: Kissimmee (28.2919, -81.4076); St. Cloud (28.2486, -81.2814). Across those 2 sample point(s), the highest provider-reported maximum download speed across merged samples is about 8 Gbps. Technologies observed across samples include Cable, Fiber, Fixed Wireless, Satellite. Per-sample technology presence (how many city coordinate samples listed each type): Cable (2), Fiber (2), Fixed Wireless (2), Satellite (2). Example provider names after merging duplicate brand+technology rows include Quantum Fiber, AT&T, Tillman Fiber, CenturyLink, Spectrum—marketing names can differ from FCC labels. These figures reflect what providers file with the FCC at those locations; they can differ from promotional pricing in the comparison tool, and they do not describe every street in Osceola County, Florida.
Technology presence across FCC samples (2 points)
Counts reflect how many city coordinate samples listed each technology in provider filings (a sample can list multiple).
- Cable×2
- Fiber×2
- Fixed Wireless×2
- Satellite×2
Fastest reported providers (merged Osceola County filings)
- Quantum Fiber (Fiber) — up to 8 Gbps download, up to 8 Gbps upload
- AT&T (Fiber) — up to 5 Gbps download, up to 5 Gbps upload
- Tillman Fiber (Fiber) — up to 2 Gbps download, up to 2 Gbps upload
Fiber (merged samples)
- Quantum Fiber (Fiber) — up to 8 Gbps download, up to 8 Gbps upload
- AT&T (Fiber) — up to 5 Gbps download, up to 5 Gbps upload
- Tillman Fiber (Fiber) — up to 2 Gbps download, up to 2 Gbps upload
Satellite (merged samples)
- Starlink (Satellite) — up to 280 Mbps download, up to 30 Mbps upload
- Viasat Inc (Satellite) — up to 150 Mbps download, up to 3 Mbps upload
- HughesNet (Satellite) — up to 100 Mbps download, up to 5 Mbps upload
Names with links open our FCC research hub for that provider.
Our stored copy of this sample was last refreshed from the FCC API on 2026-04-13. Batch updates run on our schedule; the underlying FCC map updates on the agency's semiannual publication cycle. Cross-check your address on the FCC National Broadband Map or in the comparison tool above before you order service.
Frequently asked questions
Related resources for Osceola County
Strengthen your research with our utility-cost methodology and statewide context—broadband is separate from electric/water, but many households budget them together.
- Utility costs in Osceola County — county hub with city list and estimated monthly totals where we publish them.
- Kissimmee utility breakdown — electric, water, sewer, and trash estimates with sources for our largest in-county place.
- Florida utility rates (all cities) — compare across the state.
- Kissimmee internet providers (city page) — FCC methodology, FAQs, and address search for this place in Osceola County.
- St. Cloud internet providers (city page) — FCC methodology, FAQs, and address search for this place in Osceola County.
- National internet providers tool & technology guide — fiber vs cable vs DSL definitions.