The quick answer
100–300 Mbps download covers the large majority of homes: simultaneous 4K streams, video calls, gaming, and smart-home traffic with headroom. Upgrade to 500 Mbps–1 Gbps for 5+ heavy users or constant large downloads, and prefer symmetrical fiber whenever you upload a lot — uploads, not downloads, are the usual bottleneck for creators and remote workers.
Speed by activity
| Activity | Per-stream need | Comfortable plan |
|---|---|---|
| Browsing / email | 1–5 Mbps | 50 Mbps |
| HD streaming | 5–8 Mbps | 100 Mbps |
| 4K streaming | 15–25 Mbps | 200–300 Mbps |
| Video calls | 3–8 Mbps up + down | 100 Mbps + solid upload |
| Online gaming | 3–10 Mbps (latency matters more) | 100–300 Mbps, <50 ms ping |
| Cloud backup / uploads | upload-bound | fiber (symmetrical) |
Speed by household size
| Household | Recommended download |
|---|---|
| 1–2 people, light use | 50–100 Mbps |
| 2–4 people, streaming + WFH | 100–300 Mbps |
| 4–6 people, 4K + gaming | 300–500 Mbps |
| 6+ people / creators / smart-home heavy | 500 Mbps–1 Gbps+ |
The two numbers people miss
Upload speed: cable plans advertising 300 Mbps down often upload at 20–35 Mbps — tight for simultaneous video calls and cloud backups. Fiber uploads match downloads. Latency: for gaming and calls, a 25 ms connection at 200 Mbps beats a 600 ms connection at any speed — which is why GEO satellite frustrates gamers and Starlink/fiber don’t.
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Call (855) 643-8023Frequently asked questions
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Sources: FCC Broadband Data Collection (Dec 2024 vintage) for coverage — broadbandmap.fcc.gov; provider and industry pricing sources verified July 10, 2026. Pricing is promotional/entry-rate, varies by address, and changes often — confirm with the provider.