Home Internet in Ohio — what's actually available
The data behind this page
We track 1,160 ZIP codes in Ohio across 9 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 Ohio today."
Fiber providers in Ohio
| Provider | ZIPs Covered | Coverage | Max Plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT&T Fiber | 1,160 | 100% | 5,000 Mbps |
| Frontier | 1,157 | 100% | 5,000 Mbps |
Cable providers in Ohio
| Provider | ZIPs Covered | Coverage | Max Plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spectrum | 1,159 | 100% | 1,000 Mbps |
| WOW! (WideOpenWest) | 1,158 | 100% | 1,000 Mbps |
| Xfinity | 1 | 0% | 2,000 Mbps |
| AT&T Internet | 1 | 0% | 300 Mbps |
The install math for a Ohio household
Median Ohio household income: $69,680. Typical internet stack runs about $75/mo, or $900/year — about 1.3% of pre-tax income. If you want a pro install (mount + cable management + Cat6 to the router from the network closet), Ohio-area rates run about $135/hr; typical job is 4 hours = roughly $540.
What Rick recommends in Ohio
If you can get fiber here, take it. Fiber-to-the-home means symmetric upload — which matters more in 2026 than it did even 5 years ago, because every household now has at least one work-from-home video call per day. 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 Ohio cities in our dataset: Alexandria · Amlin · Ashley · Blacklick · Bladensburg · Brinkhaven · Buckeye lake · Cable · Catawba · Centerburg · Croton · Danville.