AT&T Fiber is CNET’s pick for the best overall internet service provider in Dallas. AT&T Fiber boasts symmetrical download and upload speeds, unlimited data and high customer satisfaction scores. It’s not available to all households within the DFW area, so Spectrum Internet and T-Mobile Home Internet are solid picks, depending on what’s available in your area.
Although it may be slow compared to its Lone Star State companions, Dallas still offers plenty of high-speed internet hookups. You can connect with fast fiber options from AT&T and Frontier or find consistently speedy cable connections from Optimum and Spectrum. You could even lean into the growing 5G home internet movement and try Verizon 5G Home Internet or T-Mobile Home Internet.
If you’re looking for more affordable plans, we’ve got you covered. The cheapest internet in Dallas is Astound Broadband’s $20-a-month plan for 300 megabits per second in download speeds. Watch out for a hike in prices after the promo period ends.
CNET considers speeds, pricing, customer service and overall value to recommend the best internet service in Dallas across several categories. Our evaluation includes referencing a proprietary database built over years of reviewing internet services. We validate that against provider information by spot-checking local addresses for service availability. We also do a close read of providers’ terms and conditions and, when needed, will call ISPs to verify the details.
Despite our efforts to find the most recent and accurate information, our process has some limitations you should know about. Pricing and speed data are variable; Certain addresses may qualify for different service tiers, and monthly costs may vary, even within a city. The best way to identify your options is to plug your address into a provider’s website.
Also, the prices, speed and other information listed above and in the provider cards below may differ from what we found in our research. The cards display the full range of a provider’s pricing and speed across the US, according to our database of plan information provided directly by ISPs. At the same time, the text is specific to what’s available in Dallas. The prices referenced within this article’s text come from our research and include applicable discounts for setting up automatic payments each month — a standard industry offering. Discounts and promotions might also be available for signing a term contract or bundling multiple services.
To learn more about how we review internet providers, visit our full methodology page.
My grandmother lived in Dallas, and I can still remember the taste of the fantastic barbecue we’d devour whenever my family would visit… but I’m here to talk about broadband, not mouthwatering smoked meat. Thankfully, Dallas has quite a few home internet options, as well.
Speed range
300 – 1,000 Mbps
Price range
$50 – $80 per month
Our take – While AT&T boasts a wide footprint within Dallas-Fort Worth, Charter’s broadband service Spectrum wins out for being even more ubiquitous throughout DFW. Even more appealing, customers won’t have to fret over whether they’re serviceable for fiber or the lesser DSL; all Spectrum homes will have access to its reliable cable internet connections.
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Speed range
300 – 1,000 Mbps
Price range
$50 – $80 per month
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Speed range
300 – 5,000 Mbps
Price range
$55 – $250 per month
Our take – AT&T’s internet service has a sizable foothold in the area, widely available throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth city limits. Many neighborhoods across the metropolitan area are not serviceable for fiber. In addition, AT&T no longer offers its DSL services to new customers, which means many are left with AT&T’s fixed wireless option. Is that bad? Well, AT&T has already stated its goal of cutting its copper coverage in half by 2025, so that lets you know how outdated it has become. Conversely, it’s tough to beat AT&T Fiber if you can sign up for it.
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Speed range
300 – 5,000 Mbps
Price range
$55 – $250 per month
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Connection
Fixed wireless
Speed range
72 – 245 Mbps
Price range
$60 per month
Our take – T-Mobile has aggressively pushed its 5G home internet, and according to the Federal Communications Commission’s National Broadband Map, it’s available to almost 60% of the area.
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Connection
Fixed wireless
Speed range
72 – 245 Mbps
Price range
$60 per month
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Provider | Internet technology | Monthly price range | Speed range | Monthly equipment costs | Data cap | Contract | CNET review score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Astound Broadband Read full review |
Cable | $20-$55 | 300-1,500Mbps | Free modem; $5 for Whole-home Wi-Fi (optional) | None | None | 7 |
AT&T Internet Air Read full review |
Fixed wireless | $55 | 75-225Mbps | None | None | None | 7.4 |
AT&T Fiber Read full review |
Fiber | $55-$225 | 300-5,000Mbps | None | None | None | 7.4 |
Frontier Communications Read full review |
DSL/Fiber | $45-$130 ($60-$140 after 12 months) | 500-5,000Mbps | None | None | None | 6.3 |
Optimum Read full review |
Cable | $40-$80 | 300-940Mbps | None | None | None | 6.2 |
Spectrum Read full review |
Cable | $50-$70 | 300-1,000Mbps | Free modem; $7 router (optional) | None | None | 7.2 |
T-Mobile Home Internet Read full review |
Fixed wireless | $60 ($40 for eligible Go5G Plus and Magenta Max mobile customers) | 72-245Mbps | None | None | None | 7.4 |
Verizon 5G Home Internet Read full review |
Fixed wireless | $50-$70 ($35-$45 with qualifying Verizon 5G mobile plans) | 50-300Mbps | None | None | None | 7.2 |
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Source: CNET analysis of provider data.
Many other broadband choices exist in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area beyond our top three picks. Some are outside the Dallas city limits but can be found well within the immediate suburbs. Others may only be in small pockets farther away from the city center. In most cases, each provider offers something enticing, even with some glaring issues.
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Astound Broadband: This cable internet provider, known locally as Grande Communications but now part of parent company Astound Broadband, features some of DFW’s most compelling and competitive promo rates. The starting price of $20 a month for a 300Mbps plan is a very affordable 6 cents per Mbps. In contrast, Spectrum’s 300Mbps plan starts at $50 per month and AT&T Fiber’s 300Mbps plan clocks in at $55 per month. The same holds with Astound’s fastest plan, a 1,500Mbps tier with a monthly promo price of $55. That’s a stellar 3 cents per Mbps. Astound also features some of the steepest price increases in the industry. The Astound Broadband Texas rate card reveals that your 300Mbps plan could rise to $90 per month after your promo period. That’s stark.
Frontier Communications: Frontier features some solid serviceability in the northern portion of the Dallas metro area. You won’t find any coverage in the city center. You can get its DSL and fiber-optic service in the northwest outskirts near Irving. Garland, which is just northeast of Dallas, you’ll find coverage for 72% of households. If Frontier Fiber is available — it features symmetrical plans of 500Mbps, gigabit, 2Gbps or 5Gbps speeds ranging from $45 to $130 per month — it’s a very appealing choice. If Frontier DSL is your only option, you might want to keep looking.
Optimum: Let me be clear — Suddenlink is the provider you’re probably familiar with in Dallas. Its parent company, Altice USA, renamed it to Optimum. In any case, Optimum cable internet service can be mostly found east of Dallas in the Mesquite area, covering Balch Springs, Forney, Rockwall and Terrell. Optimum also supplies broadband service to some areas north of DFW, including Little Elm, Fairview and Prosper.
Satellite internet: Typically, if you live in a big metro area like Dallas, I wouldn’t even broach the topic of satellite internet. You’re bound to find more reliable connections, faster speeds and cheaper prices than are awaiting you with a satellite internet connection. DFW is a large area, and some on the rural periphery may not have the same options. While Hughesnet and Viasat are steady choices, both feature data restrictions. Starlink, Elon Musk’s newer satellite provider on the block, is more intriguing as it features faster speeds and no contracts — and the Starlink availability map shows availability for the Dallas-Fort Worth area (which wasn’t the case in 2023).
Verizon 5G Home Internet: Verizon has been just as ambitious with its 5G home internet product as T-Mobile, although perhaps not quite as aggressive in pursuing rural communities. As such, Verizon fell short of our top list because it might not serve communities on the outskirts of the Dallas-Fort Worth-arlington area as well as T-Mobile can. If you are serviceable for Verizon 5G Home Internet, you’ll find faster speeds than T-Mobile (average of 300Mbps to T-Mobile’s 72 to 245Mbps) and a similar, straightforward approach for $50 per month, including no data caps, no contracts and no equipment fees. Also, customers can shave $15 to $25 off their monthly bill if they have a qualifying Verizon mobile plan.
The average starting price for internet service in Dallas is approximately $46 per month, but a few providers offer plans cheaper than that. The absolute lowest starting price you can find currently belongs to Astound Broadband. It features a 300Mbps plan with a promo price of $20 per month.
Residents in downtown Dallas won’t be able to get Astound’s cheap internet, but serviceability reaches out to Flower Mound, Frisco, Fairview, Little Elm and McKinney.
Provider | Starting monthly price | Max download speed | Monthly equipment fee |
---|---|---|---|
Astound 300 Read full review |
$20 | 300Mbps | Free modem; $5 for Whole-home Wi-Fi (optional) |
Optimum 300Mbps Read full review |
$40 | 300Mbps | None |
Frontier Fiber 500 Read full review |
$45 ($60 after 12 months) | 500Mbps | None |
Spectrum Internet Read full review |
$50 | 300Mbps | Free modem; $7 router (optional) |
Verizon 5G Home Internet Read full review |
$50 ($35 with eligible phone plans) | 100Mbps | None |
AT&T Fiber 300 Read full review |
$55 | 300Mbps | None |
T-Mobile Home Internet Read full review |
$60 ($40 with eligible mobile plans) | 245Mbps | None |
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Source: CNET analysis of provider data.
The best internet deals and top promotions in Dallas depend on what discounts are available during that time. Most deals are short-lived, but we look frequently for the latest offers.
Dallas internet providers, such as Astound Broadband and Optimum, may offer lower introductory pricing or streaming add-ons for a limited time. Others, including AT&T, Frontier and Verizon, run the same standard pricing year-round.
For a more extensive list of promos, check out our guide on the best internet deals.
Dallas disappoints when you compare its home internet speeds to some of the other top cities in the US. The Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan area boasts the country’s fourth-largest population, but according to Ookla’s most recent reporting, Dallas managed only a 98th-place finish among the 100 most populated cities in the US. That puts it right behind Seattle and just above Detroit and Atlanta. This may seem competitive, but it’s well behind other Texas towns such as Austin, Corpus Christi, El Paso, Fort Worth and San Antonio — all of which made the top 15.
Provider | Starting price | Max download speed | Max upload speed | Data cap | Connection type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frontier Fiber 5 Gig Read full review |
$130 ($140 after 12 months) | 5,000Mbps | 5,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
AT&T Fiber 5000 Read full review |
$225 | 5,000Mbps | 5,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
AT&T Fiber 2000 Read full review |
$125 | 2,000Mbps | 2,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
Frontier Fiber 2 Gig Read full review |
$100 ($110 after 12 months) | 2,000Mbps | 2,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
Astound 1500 Read full review |
$55 | 1,500Mbps | 1,000Mbps | None | Cable |
Astound 1000 Read full review |
$65 ($80 after 12 months) | 1,000Mbps | 50Mbps | None | Cable |
AT&T Fiber 1000 Read full review |
$80 | 1,000Mbps | 1,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
Frontier Fiber 1 Gig Read full review |
$65 ($80 after 12 months) | 1,000Mbps | 1,000Mbps | None | Fiber |
Spectrum Internet Gig Read full review |
$70 | 1,000Mbps | 35Mbps | None | Cable |
Optimum Gig Read full review |
$80 | 940Mbps | 35Mbps | None | Cable |
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Source: CNET analysis of provider data.
Internet service providers are numerous and regional. Unlike the latest smartphone, laptop, router or kitchen tool, it’s impractical to personally test every ISP in a given city. What’s our approach? We start by researching the pricing, availability and speed information, drawing on our own historical ISP data, the provider sites and mapping information from the Federal Communications Commission at FCC.gov.
It doesn’t end there: We go to the FCC’s website to check our data and ensure we consider every ISP that provides service in an area. We also input local addresses on provider websites to find specific options for residents. We look at sources, including the American Customer Satisfaction Index and J.D. Power, to evaluate how happy customers are with an ISP’s service. ISP plans and prices are subject to frequent changes; all information provided is accurate as of publication.
Once we have this localized information, we ask three main questions:
Does the provider offer access to reasonably fast internet speeds?
Do customers get decent value for what they’re paying?
Are customers happy with their service?
While the answers to those questions are often layered and complex, the providers who come closest to “yes” on all three are the ones we recommend. When selecting the cheapest internet service, we look for the plans with the lowest monthly fee, although we also factor in things like price increases, equipment fees and contracts. Choosing the fastest internet service is relatively straightforward. We look at advertised upload and download speeds and consider real-world speed data from sources like Ookla and FCC reports.
To explore our process in more depth, visit our page on how we test ISPs.
As we like to say in our CNET home internet reviews, fiber internet trumps cable broadband almost every time. So if you have access to any of the AT&T Fiber plans — or, if you’re in the suburbs, Frontier Fiber — that will be your best bet. Cable providers like Spectrum, Astound, and Optimum offer reliable connections and plenty of fast plans to suit just about any household. Be sure to avoid data caps, and if you’re serviceable for providers like AT&T or Frontier, ensure you can get their fiber plans and don’t have to settle for a slower, spottier DSL connection.
What is the cheapest internet provider in Dallas?
If you’re looking for the cheapest service in Dallas, Astound Broadband’s option of 300Mbps for $20 per month is the absolute lowest you can pay monthly. Just beware of a steep price jump after the promo period ends.
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Is fiber internet service available in Dallas?
Yes. Several internet providers offer fiber connections within the greater Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metro area. AT&T and Frontier have the fastest plans, each with a 5Gbps tier with symmetrical speeds. One thing to note is that each of those ISPs also has DSL plans, so do your homework to ensure you’re getting their fiber offering and not DSL.
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Which internet provider in Dallas offers the fastest plan?
AT&T and Frontier have the fastest plans in Big D, featuring symmetrical download and upload speeds of 5,000Mbps. They each also have a 2-gig plan. Among cable internet providers, Astound Broadband boasts a 1,500Mbps plan, the fastest cable internet package in the Dallas metro area. Lastly, according to Ookla’s most recent findings, AT&T has the fastest average download speeds in Dallas, clocking in with a median download speed of approximately 265Mbps.
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