Breezeline

Breezeline is a cable internet provider serving parts of the eastern U.S. In our FCC samples, Breezeline appears with a Cable technology label—typical of hybrid-coax networks that deliver broadband over upgraded cable plant.

Cable service can offer high download speeds in well-engineered neighborhoods but still varies by node and local congestion. Our city samples capture provider-reported fields at coordinates, not your modem’s speed test.

States and cities in our index are where this name showed up in pulls we store; they are not an exhaustive franchise map.

Transparency: FCC data here is research context only. Live retail pricing, promotions, equipment fees, and exact serviceability come from the provider after an address check—use our tool below when you are ready to shop.

Plans, speeds, and what to expect

FCC filings do not include promo pricing, modem rental, or TV-bundle discounts. This page is context, not a bill estimator.

Cable max-download values in filings may be high in upgraded areas; real-world Wi-Fi and plan tier still dominate experience.

Competition from fiber overbuilders or telco fiber can exist in the same metro—use city pages to see who else files, then qualify addresses.

For what Breezeline sells today at your home, use address-level shopping tools.

How to check real pricing and plans

FCC National Broadband Map extracts do not include live retail pricing, bill totals, or a definitive “yes/no” at your exact door without a provider-side qualification flow. The most accurate way to see current plans, speed tiers, and serviceability is to run an availability check at your address.

Check internet providers at your address

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Cable-centric footprint in our samples across several states—helpful when comparing regional cable to national brands.
  • Natural peer to Spectrum, Xfinity, and Cox on city-level FCC tables.
  • Strong fit for suburban and small-city research where coax is common.

Cons

  • Cable performance is neighborhood-dependent; FCC rows do not show congestion.
  • Smaller national sample spread than the largest cable MSOs—absence from a city may simply mean we have not sampled there.
  • Not a substitute for address qualification or plan selection.

Best for

  • Households in Breezeline markets comparing against fiber or fixed wireless.
  • Readers linking from city internet-provider pages that list Breezeline.
  • Movers who want FCC-sampled context before running the comparison tool.

FCC snapshot summary

Figures below merge provider-reported fields across our city samples only. They are not a substitute for an address check and may differ from what you can order.

Technologies in filings
Cable
Highest max download (our city data)
1 Gbps
Largest provider-reported value across merged FCC rows at our coordinates—not guaranteed at every address.

City snapshots

Each city snapshot is one place in our dataset where we queried the National Broadband Map at municipal coordinates and this provider name appeared in the residential rows we retain.

City snapshots in this index
6
Subset of U.S. cities we cover—not a national census.
States touched by those snapshots
5
Distinct states with at least one sampled city listing this name.

Averaging about 1.2 city snapshots per sampled state (a spread metric, not market share).

Methodology: how we sample cities.

Cities in our dataset where this provider appears

These links go to our city internet provider pages (FCC context plus the address tool). Inclusion means Breezeline showed up in the FCC extract for that city's coordinates—not full-city buildout and not every street or unit.

Technologies in our FCC data

Labels below come from filings tied to Breezeline in our city-coordinate pulls. Multiple technologies usually mean the brand files under more than one network type across markets—or multiple paths in the same region.

Cable

Cable internet typically uses the same coax plant as TV service and often delivers higher speeds than legacy DSL, with performance that can vary by neighborhood load and network upgrades.

How this provider compares

Versus Spectrum or Xfinity, all are cable-forward in our data; local head-to-head depends on franchise overlap, not this summary alone.

Versus AT&T, Verizon, or Frontier fiber, cable often trades different upload and latency profiles—address tools clarify sellable tiers.

Versus satellite, cable usually wins on latency where it actually reaches the address.

States represented in our samples

State hubs list counties and cities in our coverage. Use them to browse beyond the FCC links above.

FCC research vs shopping

Use this page to understand technologies and where our samples encounter a brand. When you need live pricing, promos, and address-level qualification, move to the internet provider search—results there may differ from raw FCC rows and from your final bill.

Index generated 2026-04-15. Counts are how many city coordinate snapshots list this provider name, not nationwide coverage or address-level availability.

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