Fios vs Spectrum: Fiber vs Cable, Head-to-Head
In Northeast markets where both are available, the choice usually comes down to fiber's consistency versus cable's simpler no-contract pricing.
| Verizon Fios | Spectrum | |
|---|---|---|
| Technology | Fiber (symmetrical) | Cable (asymmetrical) |
| Top consumer tier | 5 Gbps | 1 Gbps |
| Upload speed (1 Gig tier) | ~880 Mbps | ~35 Mbps |
| Price stability | Price for Life, no increase | Fixed schedule increase, disclosed upfront |
| Data cap | None | None |
| Measured delivered speed | 98% of advertised | 88% of advertised |
Where Fios Wins
Symmetrical upload is the single biggest practical difference — Fios delivers roughly 25x the upload speed of Spectrum at the same download tier. For remote work, video calls, cloud backup, or content creation, this matters more day-to-day than the download number most people compare first.
Where Spectrum Wins
Spectrum's coverage footprint is broader within the Northeast overlap zone, and its no-contract, no-price-increase-surprise structure (increases are scheduled and disclosed, not hidden) appeals to anyone who values simplicity over top-end speed. If 1 Gbps download is genuinely enough and you don't have upload-heavy needs, the price difference at that tier is minor.
The Verdict
Choose Fios if you can get it and value upload speed or long-term price stability. Choose Spectrum if Fios isn't available at your address, or you specifically want to avoid a fiber installation appointment and are fine with cable's asymmetrical speed profile.