Internet in Washington: a buyer's guide
Everything you need to know about choosing an ISP in Washington — fiber availability, the fastest providers, rural options, and business connectivity.
The Washington broadband landscape
Internet availability in Washington reflects the state's geography. Major cities have multiple fiber and cable providers competing on speed and price. Suburban areas typically have 2-4 options including national carriers. Rural WA households often rely on fixed wireless, satellite, or DSL — though Starlink and 5G home have dramatically improved rural options since 2023. Statewide, fiber availability sits at a growing share, with new deployments adding coverage every quarter.
Washington packs a lot of punch economically with companies like Boeing, Starbucks, Microsoft, and Amazon. And let's be honest, if you're going to run a massive corporation in this day and age, you need the best internet you can get. So, as you'd expect, Washington has some impressive internet stats.
Fastest internet in Washington
Fiber is the fastest internet technology in Washington, with multi-gigabit residential plans available in select markets. Cable plans typically top out at 1.2 Gbps download. 5G Home Internet from T-Mobile and Verizon delivers 100-300 Mbps with no install. For raw speed, look for fiber from AT&T, Frontier, Verizon Fios, Google Fiber, or your local fiber co-op depending on which carrier serves your city.
Internet for rural Washington
Rural Washington has historically been under-served, but 2026 brings more options than ever. **Starlink** offers 100-250 Mbps satellite anywhere with a clear sky view — install yourself in 30 minutes. **T-Mobile and Verizon 5G Home** require a strong cell signal but no contracts or installer visits. **Local WISPs** (wireless ISPs) cover specific WA counties with fixed-wireless point-to-point service. Federal RDOF and BEAD funds are also bringing fiber to previously unreached parts of Washington through 2026-2028.
Business internet in Washington
Washington businesses have access to enterprise fiber from AT&T Business, Lumen, Spectrum Business, Comcast Business, and regional fiber providers. Dedicated Internet Access (DIA) circuits with SLAs start around $300/mo for symmetrical 100 Mbps. SD-WAN and SASE solutions are widely deployed across WA commercial real estate. For small businesses and home offices, business-class cable and fiber from the consumer providers on this page typically meet the need at a 30-50% price premium over residential.







