Cox Communications is the third-largest cable provider in the US, serving primarily suburban and urban markets in 18 states. They offer a range of cable and fiber plans with competitive speeds. Cox is investing heavily in fiber-to-the-home upgrades.
Founded
1962
Customers
5.2 million
Headquarters
Atlanta, GA
Coverage
Regional
| Plan | Download | Upload | Type | Data Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Go Fast 100 Cox Panoramic Wifi available | 100 Mbps | 5 Mbps | Cable | 1.3 TB | $50/mo $71/mo |
Internet 250 Good for streaming and gaming | 250 Mbps | 10 Mbps | Cable | 1.3 TB | $70/mo $94/mo |
Internet 500 Great for large households | 500 Mbps | 10 Mbps | Cable | 1.3 TB | $90/mo $115/mo |
Gigablast Gigabit download speeds | 1 Gbps | 35 Mbps | Cable | 1.3 TB | $110/mo $140/mo |
$50/mo
$71/mo
Download
100 Mbps
Upload
5 Mbps
Data Cap
1.3 TB
$70/mo
$94/mo
Download
250 Mbps
Upload
10 Mbps
Data Cap
1.3 TB
$90/mo
$115/mo
Download
500 Mbps
Upload
10 Mbps
Data Cap
1.3 TB
$110/mo
$140/mo
Download
1 Gbps
Upload
35 Mbps
Data Cap
1.3 TB
Available in 18 states with a strong presence in Arizona, Virginia, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Las Vegas, San Diego, and Orange County. Primarily serves suburban communities.
View on FCC Broadband MapStarted at $50/month for their starter plan. Two years later I'm paying $94 for the same service. Every year they find a way to increase the price. The data cap and $13/month equipment fee make it even worse. Looking for alternatives.
Cox has gotten better over the years. Speeds are more reliable now and they offer better plans. But the data cap and high equipment fees keep them behind the competition. The $13/month Panoramic WiFi fee is especially annoying.
The Gigablast plan delivers. I'm consistently getting 800-950 Mbps down. For gaming it's been excellent with low ping times. The data cap is annoying but I haven't hit it yet with just two people. Panoramic WiFi pods work well too.
Cox is the only broadband provider at my address, so I don't have much choice. Speeds are okay - getting around 200 Mbps on the 250 plan. The 1.25 TB data cap is a problem for our family of five. We've gone over twice.