Xfinity Plans: What You Actually Pay After the Promo Ends
Xfinity's advertised prices only apply for the first 12-24 months. After that, most plans jump $30-50/month — and Comcast doesn't proactively tell you when the increase hits. Here's every current tier with both the promotional and standard rate.
| Plan | Speed | Promo Price | Standard Price | Equipment Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Connect | 75 Mbps | $25/mo | $66/mo | $15/mo (xFi Gateway) |
| Connect More | 150 Mbps | $35/mo | $76/mo | $15/mo |
| Fast | 300 Mbps | $45/mo | $86/mo | $15/mo |
| Superfast | 600 Mbps | $55/mo | $96/mo | $15/mo |
| Gigabit | 1.2 Gbps | $65/mo | $106/mo | $15/mo (waived on 2yr) |
| Gigabit Extra | 1.2 Gbps sym. | $75/mo | $116/mo | Included |
The $15/month equipment fee is avoidable — buying a compatible modem/router outright (roughly $120-180 one-time) pays for itself in 8-12 months for anyone keeping Xfinity longer than a year.
Which Tier Actually Fits Your Household
- 1-2 people, light streaming: Connect More (150 Mbps) covers 4K streaming plus normal browsing with headroom.
- 3-4 people, gaming + WFH: Fast or Superfast (300-600 Mbps) — the upload speed on lower tiers becomes the bottleneck for video calls before download does.
- Household with a home server, heavy uploads, or multiple remote workers: Gigabit Extra is the first Xfinity tier with genuinely symmetrical (upload = download) speed.
Xfinity vs Bundling: Is It Worth It
Xfinity aggressively pushes internet + mobile bundles, discounting internet by $10-15/month per mobile line. For a single-line household this rarely beats a cheap MVNO plan when you do the full math — but for families already on 3+ Xfinity Mobile lines, the bundle discount often makes internet effectively free at the Fast tier.
For the full network performance picture, see our Xfinity speed test results by plan.