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Check Internet Providers by Address or ZIP — Near Me

Enter your address or ZIP to see every internet provider at your exact location — fiber, cable, 5G, DSL, and satellite — with real speeds from official FCC broadband data.

Quick Answer

Enter your address or ZIP above to instantly see every internet provider at your exact location. Results use official FCC Broadband Data Collection filings for street-level accuracy across all 30,000+ US ZIPs.

Official FCC Data

Pulled from the FCC Broadband Data Collection — the federal record every provider must file twice a year.

Actual Advertised Speeds

Maximum download and upload each provider reports at that specific location, not a national average.

Street-Level, Not ZIP-Level

Results use BDC Broadband Serviceable Location IDs, so two homes on the same block can get different answers.

How to Check Internet Providers Near You

When people search for internet providers near me or internet providers in my area, they usually mean one of two things: which companies sell internet at my exact home, and which plans can I actually order today. This page answers both. The lookup above accepts either a full street address or a five-digit ZIP code. If you enter an address, we resolve it to an FCC Broadband Serviceable Location ID and return only the providers that reported service at that location. If you enter a ZIP, we return every provider with at least one serviceable location inside that ZIP and link you to the full ZIP-level breakdown.

For a broader view, browse by market — for example, Austin, TX internet providers, Miami, FL internet providers, or your full state list. Our ZIP-level pages include competitive density, median speeds, and typical price ranges.

Why Internet Availability Changes Block to Block

Internet infrastructure is not evenly distributed. Cable networks (DOCSIS), fiber networks (GPON, XGS-PON, and Active Ethernet), and fixed wireless towers are each built out neighborhood by neighborhood, usually along existing utility corridors. Providers prioritize streets where they can reach the most homes per mile of build, which is why a new fiber route may cover only half a ZIP code in its first year. Two addresses 500 feet apart can have completely different provider lists — one may have fiber and cable, the other just cable and DSL.

Address-level checking is the only reliable way to know. That is exactly what the FCC Broadband Data Collection was built to support: instead of reporting by Census block (which could hide dead zones in large blocks), providers now report by individual serviceable location. Our lookup queries that data directly.

What Data Powers the Answer

Every result on this page is backed by the FCC Broadband Data Collection (BDC). The BDC is the federal broadband map program that replaced Form 477 in 2022. Under BDC rules, every facilities-based internet provider must file service records twice a year at the individual address level, not the Census block level. Filings are subject to public challenges, FCC audits, and corrections from state broadband offices. We combine BDC with provider-reported plan and pricing data to show both availability and the actual speed tiers you can buy.

When you read the results, pay attention to three fields per provider: technology (fiber is always better than cable for uploads), maximum download speed, and maximum upload speed. Fiber providers typically show symmetrical speeds (e.g. 1000 down / 1000 up). Cable providers show much slower uploads (e.g. 1000 down / 35 up). 5G home internet numbers depend on tower congestion and should be treated as a ceiling, not a guaranteed floor. Our methodology page documents every data source, refresh cadence, and known limitation.

Check Availability by Provider

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I check internet providers at my address?
Enter your street address in the lookup tool above. We match it against FCC Broadband Data Collection records, which every US internet provider must file twice a year at the individual-location level. Within seconds you will see each provider, the technology they use at your address (fiber, cable, DSL, fixed wireless or satellite), and the maximum advertised download and upload speeds.
Why does internet availability change from street to street?
Cable and fiber networks are built one neighborhood, street, and even one block at a time. Providers extend service where the economics work — typically along existing utility corridors and in denser developments first. Two addresses on the same block can have different options because a fiber node may only reach the west side of the street, or because a new development was not yet wired when the provider last filed FCC data. That is why a ZIP-level answer is not enough: you need the street-level check above.
How is ZIP-code lookup different from address-level lookup?
A ZIP code covers hundreds to thousands of homes and usually contains several providers across the area. Our ZIP pages show every provider with service somewhere inside that ZIP. Address-level lookup narrows that list to just the providers who serve your exact location, using FCC address-linked Broadband Serviceable Location data. Start with a ZIP search to survey the market and follow up with an address check to confirm which plans you can actually order.
Is Fios available at my address?
Verizon Fios is limited to parts of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic — mainly New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Washington DC, and pockets of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. Run the checker above with your street address to confirm, or visit our Verizon Fios page for coverage and plan details.
How accurate is the availability data?
Our dataset is sourced from the FCC Broadband Data Collection (BDC), which replaced the older Form 477 program. Providers must file serviceable-location data twice a year and are subject to FCC challenges and audits. BDC data is typically 95%+ accurate, but newly built homes and just-launched fiber routes can lag one filing cycle.
What if no providers show up at my address?
Try a neighboring address, check the ZIP-level page, or search by your nearest major cross street. Rural areas often have fewer wired options but almost always have satellite (Starlink, Viasat, Hughesnet) and increasingly 5G home internet from T-Mobile or Verizon. Our ZIP and state pages will surface those options even when wired providers are sparse.

Explore Internet Availability by Location and Technology

Use the links below to browse availability by state, major metro, ZIP, or connection type. Every page on these paths is backed by the same FCC Broadband Data Collection feed powering the checker above.

Other ways to find providers: