AT&T Fiber vs Verizon Fios: The Two Most Consistent US ISPs
Both AT&T Fiber and Verizon Fios topped our delivered-speed-consistency measurements across every ISP tested in this series. In the limited markets where both are available, the differences come down to details rather than raw performance.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| AT&T Fiber | Verizon Fios | |
|---|---|---|
| Entry price (300 Mbps) | $55/mo | $49.99/mo |
| Top consumer tier | 5 Gbps | 5 Gbps |
| Measured delivered speed | 96-99% of advertised | 96-99% of advertised |
| Price guarantee | No contract, stable historically | Price for Life |
| Included router WiFi range | Moderate (mesh recommended for larger homes) | Strong (WiFi 6E) |
| Footprint | ~30% of AT&T territory | Mostly Northeast corridor |
Where AT&T Wins
Broader overall geographic footprint — AT&T Fiber reaches parts of the South, Midwest, and West that Fios doesn't touch at all.
Where Verizon Wins
Slightly lower entry pricing, a formal "Price for Life" guarantee rather than just historical stability, and a noticeably stronger included router — our testing showed better same-room and near-range WiFi performance out of the box.
The Verdict
In the rare markets where you can genuinely choose between the two, Fios's explicit price guarantee and stronger router give it a slight edge for most households. AT&T remains the better pick simply because it's available in far more places — for most readers, availability will decide this comparison before performance does.