Internet providers in Boston, MA (2026)
Real pricing and availability from our sample dataset for ZIP 02108. Ranked by connection type and value so you can skip the marketing.
Sample data · Real FCC availability lookup is in development.
Availability summary
- Fastest download
- 2,000 Mbps
- Lowest promo price
- $35/mo
- Fiber available
- Yes
- 5G home available
- Yes
- Fiber
- Cable
- 5G Home
- Satellite
Top internet providers in Boston
Ranked fiber first, then 5G home, cable, and satellite, with the lowest promo price within each category at the top.
- 1
Verizon Fios
FiberFios Gigabit Connection
- Download
- 940 Mbps
- Upload
- 880 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- 2-year price guarantee
- Router included
- No data cap
Estimated 2-year true cost: $2,160
Read our Verizon Fios reviewCall to order$90/mofor 12 months
Updated
- 2
Verizon Fios
FiberFios 2 Gig
- Download
- 2,000 Mbps
- Upload
- 2,000 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- Fastest Fios tier
- Whole-home WiFi 6E router included
Estimated 2-year true cost: $2,640
Read our Verizon Fios reviewCall to order$110/mofor 12 months
Updated
- 3
T-Mobile Home Internet
5G HomeHome Internet
- Download
- 245 Mbps
- Upload
- 31 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- No contract
- $40/mo for T-Mobile wireless subs
- Gateway included
Estimated 2-year true cost: $1,200
Read our T-Mobile Home Internet reviewCall to order$50/mofor 12 months
Updated
- 4
Verizon 5G Home
5G Home5G Home
- Download
- 300 Mbps
- Upload
- 20 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- No contract
- $35/mo for Verizon Unlimited subs
- Router included
Estimated 2-year true cost: $1,200
Read our Verizon 5G Home reviewCall to order$50/mofor 12 months
Updated
- 5
Xfinity
CableConnect More
- Download
- 300 Mbps
- Upload
- 10 Mbps
- Data
- 1200 GB cap
- Contract
- 12 mo
- Unlimited data add-on available
- 1-year price lock
Estimated 2-year true cost: $1,620 (includes $15/mo equipment fee)
Read our Xfinity reviewCall to order$35/mofor 12 months
$70/mo after
Updated
- 6
Xfinity
CableGigabit
- Download
- 1,000 Mbps
- Upload
- 35 Mbps
- Data
- 1200 GB cap
- Contract
- 12 mo
- xFi Gateway included option
- Fastest widely available cable tier
Estimated 2-year true cost: $2,520 (includes $15/mo equipment fee)
Read our Xfinity reviewCall to order$70/mofor 12 months
$110/mo after
Updated
- 7
Xfinity
CableGigabit Extra 2.0
- Download
- 2,000 Mbps
- Upload
- 300 Mbps
- Data
- 1200 GB cap
- Contract
- 24 mo
- Multi-gig over DOCSIS 4.0 where available
- Unlimited data included
Estimated 2-year true cost: $3,060 (includes $15/mo equipment fee)
Read our Xfinity reviewCall to order$90/mofor 24 months
$135/mo after
Updated
- 8
Starlink
SatelliteResidential
- Download
- 150 Mbps
- Upload
- 20 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- One-time $349 hardware
- Low-earth-orbit, ~30ms latency
- Great for rural + RV
Estimated 2-year true cost: $2,880
Read our Starlink reviewCall to order$120/mofor 12 months
Updated
- 9
Viasat
SatelliteUnleashed
- Download
- 100 Mbps
- Upload
- 5 Mbps
- Data
- Unlimited
- Contract
- None
- Unlimited data
- Free standard install
- Nationwide coverage
Estimated 2-year true cost: $2,880
Read our Viasat reviewCall to order$120/mofor 12 months
Updated
Prices and plans reflect operator-published 2026 rates for ZIP 02108 at time of writing. Your exact offer may vary by address. Confirm with the provider before ordering.
The Boston broadband market
Boston is one of the strongest Verizon Fios metros in the country. Fios launched in the city itself relatively late, Boston only approved the franchise in 2014 under Mayor Walsh, a decade after the suburbs, but since then Verizon has been aggressively trenching fiber through the Back Bay, Beacon Hill (where ZIP 02108 sits), the South End, Dorchester, Roxbury, and Jamaica Plain. Most of the surrounding suburbs (Brookline, Cambridge in parts, Newton, Quincy) have had Fios for well over a decade. The cable incumbent is Xfinity everywhere, with a very dense DOCSIS 3.1 network running up to 2 Gbps. RCN existed here historically but was absorbed into Astound and has largely exited residential service in the city. Starry Internet was a Boston-born fixed-wireless ISP that went bankrupt in 2023; a few buildings still have Starry wiring but the service is effectively gone.
What actually matters here
Fios and Xfinity are in genuine fiber-vs-cable competition here, both offer gigabit and 2-gig tiers, and promotional pricing is unusually aggressive. Fios Gig at $90/mo flat with symmetrical upload is the pick for work-from-home and video-heavy households. Xfinity is often a few dollars cheaper in the promo year but nearly doubles afterward. T-Mobile 5G Home works in much of the city but has notable weak spots in dense brick-and-steel neighborhoods like Beacon Hill.
The fiber situation in Boston
Fiber is the best option in Boston where it reaches. Our sample includes Verizon Fios, with entry-level tiers starting at $90/mo for 940 Mbps symmetrical and top tiers reaching 2,000 Mbps. Most fiber plans here are flat-rate with no promo-to-regular cliff, no data caps, and no equipment fees, which is where the real savings vs. cable show up in year two.
The 5G home situation in Boston
5G home is a legitimate option in Boston. Our sample includes T-Mobile Home Internet and Verizon 5G Home, all at flat prices with no contracts. Whether the signal is good enough at your specific address depends on the tower grid more than anything, upper floors and line-of-sight to the nearest mid-band tower tend to perform best. For renters who can’t wait for a cable installer appointment, it’s often the easiest win.
Alternatives to the big cable ISP
Starlink (backup)
Usually unnecessary in a metro, but a solid backup if cable goes down during storms. Keep it in mind if you work from home and need resilience.
5G home (renter-friendly)
No installer, no contract, takes 10 minutes to set up. The easiest path if you move often or can’t drill holes. Speed varies with tower load, test it during your return window.
Not a replacement
A smartphone hotspot is fine for a hotel night. It is not a home internet replacement, data prioritization and thermal throttling will bite you within a week.
Ranked lists relevant to Boston
Our quarterly-refreshed picks, filtered to the categories that actually matter at ZIP 02108.
Best fiber internet providers of 2026
Fiber is the right answer when you can get it. Here are the five fiber ISPs we'd actually sign up for in 2026, and which one wins at your address.
Top pick: Verizon Fios · Best overall
See the listBest 5G home internet of 2026
Four carriers, one cable-alternative category that finally grew up. Here's who wins in 2026, and why Starlink keeps showing up in the shortlist.
Top pick: T-Mobile Home Internet · Best overall
See the listBest gigabit internet providers of 2026, ranked
Gigabit is now table stakes for fiber and a marketing line for cable. We rank the six gigabit plans worth buying, with the upload-asymmetry tax called out by name.
Top pick: Verizon Fios Gigabit · Best gigabit overall
See the listBest cheap internet providers of 2026 (under $50/mo)
Five picks under $50/mo, ranked honestly on price stability, speed, contract terms, availability, and support, with every post-promo trap called out.
Top pick: T-Mobile Home Internet · Best $50 flat-rate pick
See the list
Head-to-head matchups in Boston
Side-by-side breakdowns of the providers actually competing for your address.
- Starlink vs Viasat
Starlink vs Viasat 2026: which satellite internet is better?
LEO beats GEO. Starlink wins on speed, latency, and flexibility; Viasat holds on only for properties with obstructed sky or bare-minimum bills.
See the matchup - T-Mobile Home vs Verizon 5G Home
T-Mobile Home Internet vs Verizon 5G Home: which to pick?
T-Mobile wins on footprint and price; Verizon 5G Home Plus wins on ceiling in mmWave markets. Here's the breakdown.
See the matchup - T-Mobile Home vs Starlink
Starlink vs T-Mobile Home Internet, which wireless ISP wins?
T-Mobile if you can get it; Starlink if you can't. Here's the full head-to-head on price, speed, and coverage.
See the matchup - Xfinity vs Spectrum
Xfinity vs Spectrum 2026: which cable internet is better?
The two biggest cable ISPs, rated on every dimension that matters. Xfinity wins on performance, Spectrum on price — here is which one fits your house.
See the matchup
Current deals and credits
Signup credits, bill-pay rebates, and bundle discounts are sometimes stackable with the prices shown above.
Related reading
What internet speed do I need?
Right-size your plan before you pay for speed you'll never use.
Read the guideFiber vs. cable
Where fiber actually beats cable, and where it doesn't.
Read the guideHow to lower your internet bill
The retention-call playbook for every major ISP.
Read the guideMoving your internet
Transfer, cancel, or switch, what to do 30 days before move-in.
Read the guide
Check availability near Boston
Coverage and pricing shift block by block. These nearby ZIP codes have a competitive provider mix worth comparing side-by-side.
Boston internet FAQ
What's the fastest internet in Boston?
Is fiber available in Boston?
What's the cheapest internet in Boston?
Is 5G home internet any good in Boston?
How do I negotiate a lower internet bill in Boston?
Check availability at your exact address
Block-by-block availability in Boston can vary. Enter your ZIP on the homepage to see exactly what serves your address, or call a licensed expert for a 60-second walkthrough.