Internet providers in Gallup, New Mexico
Enter your street address or ZIP code to compare plans. Availability follows your service location—not only McKinley County or the Gallup label.
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Broadband in Gallup
Gallup is the Route 66 hub in McKinley County—downtown coal-avenue retail, Navajo Nation border commerce, and municipal Joint Utilities (GJU) that bills electric, water, sewer, and trash on one statement. Slug gallup-nm distinguishes this high-desert city in search.
Gallup's FCC coordinate leads with Xfinity cable at up to 1.2 Gbps—Ethos Broadband fixed wireless also files 400 Mbps down while county-edge lots pay 2× city utility rates. Municipal GJU electric (~$163 @ 1,000 kWh); water ~$75/mo @ 5,000 gal (incl. NGWS surcharge); sewer ~$37/mo; trash $19.76/mo. Compare symmetric upload before you sign a coax promo on a historic motel conversion.
City of Gallup Electric Department (GJU) supplies municipal electric; GJU also bills water, sewer, and solid waste. Official coverage research: FCC National Broadband Map.
Internet providers by technology in Gallup
Researching home internet in Gallup? At our FCC National Broadband Map sample (35.5281, -108.7426), cable from Xfinity (reported up to 1.2 Gbps download) is another common path in FCC data for suburban and in-town routes; Ethos Broadband lists fixed wireless at this sample point—useful where fiber or cable drops have not been built to the lot; satellite providers such as Starlink, HughesNet, Viasat Inc also file at this coordinate, which can matter on rural fringes even when Gallup looks well served on a map. Promotional pricing and store availability are not in FCC filings—run the comparison tool with your full street address before you order.
Notable options in this FCC sample
- Xfinity — Highest provider-reported max download in our Gallup FCC sample (1.2 Gbps)
- Ethos Broadband — Fixed wireless option where listed (up to 400 Mbps download reported)
- Verizon — Fixed wireless option where listed (up to 300 Mbps download reported)
- AT&T — Fixed wireless option where listed (up to 25 Mbps download reported)
- Starlink — Satellite alternative where wireline is limited (FCC filing at our Gallup sample point)
- HughesNet — Satellite alternative where wireline is limited (FCC filing at our Gallup sample point)
- Viasat Inc — Satellite alternative where wireline is limited (FCC filing at our Gallup sample point)
Fastest internet providers in Gallup
Xfinity cable tops our Gallup coordinate at 1.2 Gbps—Ethos Broadband fixed wireless also files 400 Mbps down in the Route 66 sample.
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xfinity | Cable | 1.2 Gbps | 35 Mbps |
| Ethos Broadband | Fixed Wireless | 400 Mbps | 80 Mbps |
| Verizon | Fixed Wireless | 300 Mbps | 20 Mbps |
| Starlink | Satellite | 280 Mbps | 30 Mbps |
| CenturyLink | DSL | 100 Mbps | 40 Mbps |
Fiber internet providers in Gallup
No fiber providers file at our stored Gallup coordinate—city water (~$75/mo @ 5k gal incl. NGWS surcharge) and sewer (~$37/mo) bill on GJU alongside municipal electric (~$163 @ 1,000 kWh).
Cable internet providers in Gallup
Xfinity cable lists 1.2 Gbps download along Coal Avenue—municipal trash ($19.76/mo) bills on the same GJU statement.
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xfinity | Cable | 1.2 Gbps | 35 Mbps |
Fixed wireless internet in Gallup
Ethos Broadband and Verizon fixed wireless cover Thoreau-adjacent lots where county residents pay 2× city utility rates.
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethos Broadband | Fixed Wireless | 400 Mbps | 80 Mbps |
| Verizon | Fixed Wireless | 300 Mbps | 20 Mbps |
| AT&T | Fixed Wireless | 25 Mbps | 3 Mbps |
DSL internet providers in Gallup
Legacy copper DSL filings—often slower max downloads but sometimes the only wireline option on older plant.
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| CenturyLink | DSL | 100 Mbps | 40 Mbps |
Satellite internet providers in Gallup
Starlink leads satellite for Navajo Nation–adjacent routes with a Gallup mailing address.
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starlink | Satellite | 280 Mbps | 30 Mbps |
| HughesNet | Satellite | 50 Mbps | 5 Mbps |
| Viasat Inc | Satellite | 25 Mbps | 3 Mbps |
Internet providers in Gallup (FCC filing sample)
Table lists provider-reported residential filings at our stored coordinate for Gallup. This is research data—not live pricing, percent coverage, or a guarantee that every brand sells at your address. See how we use FCC data below for sample methodology, then confirm plans in the comparison tool above.
Connection types in this FCC sample
- Fixed Wireless (3)
- Satellite (3)
- Cable (1)
- DSL (1)
| Provider | Connection | Max download | Max upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xfinity | Cable | 1.2 Gbps | 35 Mbps |
| Ethos Broadband | Fixed Wireless | 400 Mbps | 80 Mbps |
| Verizon | Fixed Wireless | 300 Mbps | 20 Mbps |
| Starlink | Satellite | 280 Mbps | 30 Mbps |
| CenturyLink | DSL | 100 Mbps | 40 Mbps |
| HughesNet | Satellite | 50 Mbps | 5 Mbps |
| AT&T | Fixed Wireless | 25 Mbps | 3 Mbps |
| Viasat Inc | Satellite | 25 Mbps | 3 Mbps |
How much internet speed do you need in Gallup?
Headline Mbps in ads are often “up to” values. Match the plan to how many people and devices share the connection—not only the fastest number on a provider card. Upload speed matters for video calls and cloud backups.
25+ Mbps
- Web, email, HD streaming
- 1–2 devices
- Ideal for 1–2 people
100+ Mbps
- 4K streaming, online gaming, video calls
- 3–5 devices
- Ideal for 2–6 people
500 Mbps – 1 Gig
- Multiple 4K streams, large uploads, smart home
- 5+ devices
- Ideal for 6+ people or heavy WFH
Mbps (megabits per second) measures data rate. FCC broadband benchmarks use 25 Mbps download as a baseline for fixed service; fiber and cable plans in Gallup often exceed that where plant reaches your address.
Check out internet providers in nearby New Mexico cities
Before you order in Gallup
- Use your exact address. McKinley County can include multiple networks—or pockets with only one wireline option. Summaries on this page and FCC filings describe sample points, not a quote for your home.
- Check HOA and apartment rules. Bulk agreements or approved-provider lists can limit what you can install—ask the property manager if results look narrow.
- Compare technology types. Plans may be labeled cable, fiber, DSL, fixed wireless, or satellite—upload speed and latency vary. Match the plan to how you use the connection, not only headline download Mbps.
- Cross-check government data. Our FCC section below explains the one-point sample we store; the FCC National Broadband Map lets you search your address. The shopping tool above shows retail offers—they can disagree, so confirm with the ISP before you sign up.
How we use FCC broadband data
This section explains how we build the FCC provider table above for Gallup. It is methodology—not a coverage map for the whole city and not a substitute for checking your street address in the comparison tool.
We take one sample coordinate per city from our dataset (the point we store in cities.json, usually a centroid or chosen coordinate—not an address you enter on this page). We query the FCC National Broadband Map API for residential provider filings at that latitude and longitude, then store the rows in fcc-broadband-by-city.json for this page. Each row is a brand + technology + reported max speeds; multiple rows per brand are normal (for example separate cable and fiber filings).
Filings describe what providers report at that point. They are not retail prices, promotional bundles, percent of homes served, or a guarantee that service can be installed at your driveway.
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 this sample shows
- Sample coordinates
- 35.5281, -108.7426
- One point in our city dataset
- Distinct provider names
- 8
- 8 provider+technology filing rows in the table above
- Fastest reported download
- up to 1.2 Gbps
- Highest max in this sample only
- Satellite in sample
- Yes
- Starlink, HughesNet, Viasat Inc
Our stored copy of this sample was last refreshed from the FCC API on 2026-06-06. 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
More on Utility Rates
- How we research utility rates and data freshness—methodology for the estimates on our city pages (separate from ISP shopping).
- Average utility bills in Gallup (electric, water, sewer, trash)—source-backed estimates separate from broadband.
- New Mexico utility costs hub—compare cities statewide.
- National internet providers tool & technology guide.