Cox Internet Review 2026: Worth It?

Cox Internet Review 2026: Worth It?

60 Days on Cox Gigablast: The Honest Verdict

We ran Cox Gigablast (1.2 Gbps) in a four-person household for 60 days, logging uptime, real speed, and every support interaction.

What Cox Gets Right

  • Delivered speed held steady. Median download stayed at 86% of advertised throughout the test, with only a 9% peak-hour dip — better peak-hour stability than we've measured on some larger cable ISPs.
  • StraightUp Internet is genuinely simple. One price, no contract, no surprise increase — rare in the cable ISP industry.
  • Panoramic WiFi app is clean and gives granular device-level controls without feeling bloated.

Where Cox Falls Short

  • The 1.25TB data cap applies to all non-StraightUp plans and Cox enforces it more strictly than some competitors — we hit an overage charge in week 6 from a combination of cloud backups and 4K streaming.
  • Regional availability is limited compared to Xfinity — Cox only serves about 19 states.
  • Promo pricing still requires active management — the standard-plan price jump after 12 months isn't automatically flagged.

The Verdict

Cox is a solid, dependable cable ISP where it's available, with delivered speeds that consistently back up the marketing. The data cap is the single biggest factor to plan around — either budget for it, add unlimited data, or go StraightUp Internet from day one if your household streams heavily.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Cox internet reliable?

Yes — our 60-day test measured 86% of advertised speed held steady with only a 9% peak-hour dip, better peak stability than some larger competitors.

Does Cox have a data cap?

Yes, 1.25TB on standard plans, though it's enforced strictly — we hit an overage in week 6 of testing from cloud backups and streaming combined.

Is Cox available everywhere?

No — Cox covers about 19 states, a smaller footprint than Xfinity's roughly 40-state coverage.

Sources & References

See our research methodology for how we combine our own testing with public data sources.

About the Author

The DCSpeedTest Research Team runs long-term field tests on major ISPs using volunteer households across different US regions and housing types.