Internet providers in Miami, Florida
Search internet providers by street address or ZIP code in the tool below to see what's available at your location—not just a generic “Florida” or city-wide guess.
Miami anchors a dense, international metro where homes range from high-rise condos to inland single-family blocks—but what you can get still depends on your exact address. Cable, fiber, fixed wireless, and satellite footprints vary by neighborhood, building type, and which networks were built first along Miami-Dade's coast and interior.
Start with the comparison tool next—then keep scrolling for South Florida market context, how plan types show up in results, and FAQs.
Compare internet plans for your address
Enter your street address or ZIP in the partner tool. Results are specific to your service location.
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What to expect in the Miami market
- Miami-Dade is dense, coastal, and fragmented by franchise areas. A Brickell tower, a Coral Way bungalow, and a Kendall subdivision can sit on different plant and easement histories. Run the tool for your exact unit—especially if you're comparing two homes in the same ZIP.
- Condos and HOAs shape what you can order. Many buildings have exclusive agreements or limited riser access; the approved provider list from management may not match what you see in a generic neighborhood search. Confirm building rules before you schedule installation.
- Fiber and cable both matter—uploads for remote work and content. South Florida has heavy demand for video calls and large file transfers. Fiber often wins on symmetric upload; strong cable tiers still compete in many areas. Your results depend on address-level eligibility, not marketing maps alone.
- Heat, humidity, and storm season. Reliable service matters if you work from home year-round; fiber and robust cable tiers usually handle congestion better than very slow DSL, but your options still come down to what's built to your address. Satellite can be affected by heavy rain—check latency and weather policies if you're weighing dish service.
Types of internet in the comparison tool
The partner tool groups plans by technology. In one Miami-area sample search we reviewed, Allconnect listed 9 cable, 8 fiber, 3 wireless, and 13 satellite plan lines—exact counts change with promotions, season, and your street address, but the labels below are what you'll see in results.
- Cable (9 plan lines in our sample)
- Widely available over coax and can offer gigabit speeds with providers like Spectrum (Charter) and Xfinity (Comcast) where each franchise serves your address. Upload speeds are usually lower than fiber at a similar price tier.
- Fiber (8 plan lines in our sample)
- Popular for fast, reliable download and upload—Allconnect's fiber bucket may show national examples in the UI, but Miami-area searches often include AT&T Fiber and Quantum Fiber or other fiber brands where networks exist; availability is still address-specific.
- Wireless (3 plan lines in our sample)
- Fixed home internet using the cellular network (4G/5G) with a gateway—similar to how your phone reaches the network, but as a household connection. Useful where wireline is weak; performance depends on tower load and indoor signal—especially in concrete-heavy high-rises where in-building coverage varies by floor.
- Satellite (13 plan lines in our sample)
- Ideal for rural pockets and anywhere wireline doesn't reach; national brands like HughesNet and Viasat are common in this category, with Starlink and EarthLink also appearing for many South Florida addresses. Expect higher latency than fiber or cable; review data policies.
Counts are illustrative of what the Allconnect tool has carried in its buckets for metro searches—they are not guarantees for your home. Always confirm technology, pricing, and install requirements in checkout.
Cross-check availability (FCC map)
For a second opinion based on where ISPs report offering service, use the FCC National Broadband Map. It uses provider filings and updates on a published schedule—it won't match promotions in the shopping tool, but it's useful for research before you order.
Frequently asked questions (Miami)
Yes. Satellite is a different technology from cable or fiber: signal travels from orbit to a dish, so availability is often broader than wireline, but latency is higher and weather or obstructions can affect performance. We spot-checked provider tools: both Starlink and EarthLink currently offer plans that cover parts or all of the South Florida metro—exact eligibility still depends on your address and property. Compare speeds, data policies, and equipment costs on each provider's site and confirm serviceability before you order.
More on Utility Rates
- Average utility bills in Miami (electric, water, sewer, trash)—our source-backed city estimate.
- Florida utility costs hub—compare other cities in the state.
- Why utility bills vary between cities—context on local pricing (electric/water), separate from broadband.
- National internet providers tool & technology guide—fiber vs cable vs DSL definitions and general FAQs.