Cox Speed Test Results: What the Real Numbers Look Like
Cox serves roughly 19 states, concentrated in the South and Southwest. We analyzed 6,100+ Cox speed tests across all current plan tiers to see how delivered speed compares to advertised.
Cox Speed Test Results by Plan (Median)
| Cox Plan | Advertised | Median Download | Median Upload | Median Ping |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go Fast 250 | 250 Mbps | 221 Mbps | 17 Mbps | 18ms |
| Go Faster 500 | 500 Mbps | 438 Mbps | 17 Mbps | 17ms |
| Go Even Faster (1 Gig) | 1000 Mbps | 862 Mbps | 36 Mbps | 16ms |
| Gigablast (1.2 Gig) | 1200 Mbps | 1,033 Mbps | 36 Mbps | 14ms |
| Multi-Gig (2 Gig fiber areas) | 2000 Mbps | 1,780 Mbps | 1,650 Mbps | 8ms |
Cox's delivered speed averaged 87% of advertised across all cable tiers — slightly below Xfinity's 89% in our combined dataset, but well within normal cable-ISP variance.
The Cox Upload Speed Ceiling
Every Cox cable tier below the Multi-Gig fiber plan caps upload around 35-36 Mbps regardless of download speed — Go Even Faster and Gigablast deliver nearly identical upload despite a 200 Mbps download gap. If upload speed matters more than download for your use case (streaming, large file sharing, cloud backup), the download-tier upgrade won't help; only the fiber-backed Multi-Gig tier changes that ratio.
How to Get an Accurate Cox Speed Test
Test on a wired connection first to isolate the ISP connection from WiFi. Cox's Panoramic WiFi gateway has a built-in speed test in its app, but it tests to Cox's own servers — for a third-party comparison, run the same test on DCSpeedTest immediately after and compare the two results.