Home Internet in New Hampshire — what's actually available

The data behind this page

We track 227 ZIP codes in New Hampshire across 5 residential ISPs. The numbers below come from our own coverage dataset — same one we publish under CC-BY 4.0 on the ISP Complaint Database. No carrier paid for placement; no affiliate relationship influences the ranking. The rank order below is by ZIP count, which is the closest honest proxy for "who can actually serve you in New Hampshire today."

Cable providers in New Hampshire

ProviderZIPs CoveredCoverageMax Plan
Xfinity227100%2,000 Mbps
Spectrum227100%1,000 Mbps

The install math for a New Hampshire household

Median New Hampshire household income: $96,838. Typical internet stack runs about $85/mo, or $1,020/year — about 1.1% of pre-tax income. If you want a pro install (mount + cable management + Cat6 to the router from the network closet), New Hampshire-area rates run about $135/hr; typical job is 4 hours = roughly $540.

What Rick recommends in New Hampshire

New Hampshire is still primarily cable for residential broadband. The fiber buildout is incoming via BEAD but hasn't hit most blocks yet. For now: cable plans in the 300-500 Mbps range cover any 4K streaming household, and you don't need the gigabit upgrade unless you have multiple heavy uploaders on the same connection. For Wi-Fi: skip the carrier rental gateway, buy your own Eero or Orbi mesh, save $10-15/month on rental, and you keep the gear when you switch ISPs.

Major cities mapped

Top New Hampshire cities in our dataset: Amherst · Auburn · Brookline · Candia · Chester · Deerfield · Derry · Epping · Francestown · Fremont · Dunbarton · Greenfield.