Internet providers in Orlando, 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.

The Orlando metro is one of the fastest-growing regions in the U.S., with heavy demand for reliable broadband for remote work and streaming—but what you can get still depends on your exact address. Cable, fiber, fixed wireless, and DSL footprints vary by neighborhood, HOA, and even side of the street.

Start with the comparison tool next—then keep scrolling for Central 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 Orlando market

  • Central Florida is a patchwork of cities and counties. Orlando sits in Orange County, but the metro includes Osceola (Kissimmee area), Seminole, Lake, and Polk—each with different housing ages and network build timelines. Provider footprints follow infrastructure and franchise boundaries, not tourism district names.
  • Cable and fiber both show up—address still wins. Many neighborhoods see competitive cable tiers; fiber is expanding but remains lot-specific. Run the tool for your exact home rather than assuming the same options as a colleague across the I-4 corridor.
  • HOAs and master plans matter. Gated communities and newer subdivisions may have conduit, bulk agreements, or exclusive wiring deals that change which ISPs can install service—especially important when you're buying new construction.
  • Heat, humidity, and year-round AC. Reliable upload speeds matter if you work from home with cooling running constantly—fiber and strong cable tiers often handle video calls better than very slow DSL, but your choices still depend on what's built to your address.

Types of internet in the comparison tool

The partner tool groups plans by technology. In one Orlando-area sample search we reviewed, Allconnect listed 13 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 (13 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. In the Orlando metro, searches often include AT&T Fiber, Quantum Fiber, and 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—common in transitional or rural-lot pockets east and south of the urban core.
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 Orlando-area addresses. Expect higher latency than fiber or cable; review data and weather-related performance.

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 (Orlando)

Broadband availability is tied to your exact address—not just ZIP code or neighborhood name. In Central Florida, master-planned communities, county lines, and franchise areas can all change which ISPs market to your lot. Always run the comparison for your specific address and unit, especially in condos and townhomes near the theme park corridor.
You can often start with your ZIP to browse what might be offered in your part of Florida, but the partner tool is built to match plans to a service location. For the most accurate internet options at your address—including apartment or condo units—enter your full street address when the tool asks for it. Large ZIPs around Orlando can span multiple cities and provider footprints.
There is no single fastest plan for every Orlando address—eligibility depends on network buildouts. When we sampled the partner comparison tool on this page for Orlando-area addresses (as of March 2026), the highest advertised residential tier we observed was 8 Gbps from Quantum Fiber at about $150/mo. Inventory and pricing change by street and date; run the tool for your address. This reflects what the tool showed in our review, not a guarantee of availability or pricing at your home.
The lowest monthly price depends on promotions and your address. In sample searches of the same partner tool (as of March 2026), we saw Spectrum advertised at 100 Mbps for about $30/mo—often with introductory terms, equipment fees, or taxes that change the out-the-door cost. Compare totals in checkout. This reflects what the tool displayed at review time, not a promise for your exact location.

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 Orlando 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.

No. Fiber and upgraded coax compete across Orange, Osceola, Seminole, and neighboring counties, but buildouts are still address-specific. Some neighborhoods rely on cable or fixed wireless. The comparison tool is the right next step to see what plans and technologies show up for your location.
The same idea applies: enter your new street address in the tool. The Orlando metro includes multiple counties and cities—what’s available in Kissimmee or St. Cloud can differ from College Park or Altamonte Springs. HOA or condo rules can also affect installation—confirm with your association if applicable.
Many multi-dwelling units (MDUs) have bulk agreements or limited wiring access, which can restrict which ISPs can market to the building. If results look limited, ask the property manager which providers are approved for your building.
Spectrum is Charter Communications’ brand for internet and TV in much of Central Florida. Xfinity is Comcast’s brand. Which one you’re eligible for depends on your address and franchise area—not the city name alone. Pricing and bundle names are still subject to address-level eligibility and current promotions.
The FCC map shows where providers have reported offering service (useful for research). The embedded comparison below is a separate shopping experience from our partner—it may show current plans and promotions for your address. Neither replaces a final order confirmation from the provider.
Internet is separate. For Orlando’s electric, water, sewer, and trash estimates with sources, use our full city page linked below. This page is focused on broadband shopping only.

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