Why Your Speed Test Lies
You pay for Gigabit fiber, but your fast internet speed test results are disappointing. Before you call your ISP, check your hardware.
The WiFi Bottleneck
If you are testing on WiFi 5 (AC), you likely won’t see speeds above 500-600 Mbps realistically. To test a true Gigabit connection, you need WiFi 6E or a Cat6 Ethernet cable.
Browser Limitations
Believe it or not, an old browser filled with extensions can slow down the test script. Try testing in Incognito mode to clear the “digital cobwebs” for a pure result.
The Ethernet Gut-Check
Before troubleshooting anything else, plug a laptop directly into your modem or ONT with a Cat6 (or better) cable and run a fast internet speed test with no router in the path. If you get close to your plan’s advertised speed this way, the bottleneck is somewhere in your home network — your router, your cabling, or your WiFi. If you still don’t see your plan’s speed on a direct wired connection, the problem is upstream with your ISP, and it’s time to document it and hold them accountable.
Multi-Gig Requires Multi-Gig Hardware
Standard gigabit Ethernet ports are physically capped at 1000 Mbps — meaning even perfect conditions can’t push a 2 Gbps fiber plan through a regular port. If your plan exceeds 1 Gbps, every device in the chain — modem, router, switch, and network card — needs a 2.5G, 5G, or 10G port to actually realize that speed. Check your hardware’s spec sheet, not just its marketing name.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my gigabit speed test show only 300-500 Mbps?
The most common cause is testing over WiFi instead of Ethernet — WiFi 5 caps out around 500-600 Mbps in real-world conditions regardless of your plan. The second most common cause is an older gigabit-rated device or cable that can’t actually sustain its rated speed under load. Test wired first to isolate the cause.
Do I need special equipment to test a multi-gig (2+ Gbps) plan?
Yes. You need a 2.5G or higher Ethernet port on your testing device, a Cat6 or Cat6a cable, and a router/switch that supports multi-gig speeds end-to-end. A standard gigabit port will silently cap your results at 1000 Mbps even if every other part of your setup is capable of more.