Internet provider search by address

Find internet providers near you. Use this tool to check which are available at your address, compare internet availability by address, and see which fiber, cable, fixed wireless, and satellite providers report service at your location.

This tool is simple to use: enter your address, click Check providers, and receive a detailed internet providers list that serves your area.

Internet provider search

Uses FCC broadband availability data. No signup required.

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New to terms like download, upload, fiber, or cable? See the guide below.

Understanding speeds and technologies

Use this guide to interpret the provider results above. Speeds are in Mbps (megabits per second); higher numbers mean faster internet.

Speeds

Download
How fast you receive data—streaming, browsing, and downloading files. Most everyday use relies on download speed.
Upload
How fast you send data—video calls, cloud backups, and posting content. Symmetric plans (equal upload and download) are common with fiber.

Technologies

Fiber
Light through glass cables. Typically the fastest option with symmetric speeds and low latency. Often best for work-from-home and gaming.
Cable
Coaxial cable (same lines as cable TV). Widely available with strong download speeds; upload is usually lower than fiber.
DSL
Uses existing phone lines. Generally slower than fiber or cable but can reach areas where other options aren't available.
Fixed Wireless
Radio signal from a nearby tower to an antenna on your home. Fills gaps in rural and suburban areas; can include 4G/5G home internet.
Satellite
Signal from orbit. Available almost everywhere; newer low-earth-orbit options (e.g. Starlink) offer lower latency than traditional satellite.

Why we created the internet provider lookup tool

Internet rates and pricing are difficult to keep accurate by address. Introductory offers, bundles, plan tiers, and provider-specific promos change constantly. What one neighbor pays can differ from another on the same street. We focus on availability instead—which providers report service at your address and what technologies and speeds they offer. Availability data comes from the FCC Broadband Data Collection. Check each provider's site for current plans and pricing.

Tips to find internet that works for you

  • Use the results as a starting point—contact providers directly to confirm serviceability and current offers at your exact address.
  • Fiber often offers the best speeds and symmetry; cable is widely available; DSL and fixed wireless can fill gaps where fiber and cable don't reach.
  • Compare advertised speeds, but ask about typical speeds, data caps, and contract terms before signing up.
  • If no providers appear, try a nearby address or ZIP code—coverage data may not include every location yet.

Data source

Provider availability comes from the FCC Broadband Data Collection, where ISPs report where they offer service. The FCC updates the National Broadband Map semi-annually (typically May and November) with data as of the prior June and December. Check the FCC site for the current data version.

Frequently asked questions

Enter your street address, city, and state above and click Check providers. The tool uses FCC data to show which ISPs report service at your location, including speeds and technologies. Contact each provider directly for current plans and pricing.
Internet pricing changes constantly—introductory offers, bundles, and promos vary by address and over time. We focus on which providers report service at your location, which is more reliable to maintain. Contact each provider directly for current plans and pricing.
Try a nearby address or just your ZIP code. Coverage data may not include every location, especially new developments. You can also check the FCC's National Broadband Map directly or call providers in your area to ask about serviceability.
Fiber typically offers the fastest speeds and symmetric upload/download. Cable is widely available and often fast. DSL uses phone lines and is usually slower. Satellite works almost everywhere but can have latency and data caps. Fixed wireless fills gaps in rural areas.
The data comes from ISPs' own reports to the FCC. Always verify with the provider before signing up—they can confirm serviceability at your exact address and give you current offers. Coverage data can lag behind actual deployments.
The FCC updates the National Broadband Map semi-annually (typically May and November) with data as of the prior June and December. There can be a lag between when a provider expands service and when it appears in the data.
These are the maximum speeds providers report offering for each technology. Actual speeds depend on your equipment, network congestion, and other factors. Ask providers about typical speeds, data caps, and contract terms before signing up.

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