2026 FCC data 47 providers 190 Mbps avg cable-led mix

Maryland Broadband Data

FCC Form 477 internet service provider coverage and transport-technology mix for Maryland (MD). All figures are programmatic rollups of public deployment filings.

Broadband technology mix Stacked horizontal bar showing the percentage share of fiber, cable, DSL, fixed-wireless, and satellite broadband filings. Broadband technology mix FCC Form 477 deployment filings · share of total records 12.0% 9.3% 60.8% 12.0% Fiber 5.90% Cable 12.00% DSL 9.30% Fixed-Wireless 60.80% Satellite 12.00% Five-segment transport-technology composition · normalised to 100%
Maryland transport-technology mix (FCC Form 477 share of filings)

Providers

47

Distinct ISPs filing in MD

Average max download

190 Mbps

Mean of advertised speeds

Fiber coverage

5.9%

Share of FCC filings

below national average

Total deployment records

663,061

Across 47 providers

Transport-technology share

Fiber 5.9%

Future-proofed transport (symmetric multi-Gbps capable)

Cable 12.0%

Coaxial DOCSIS 3.1/4.0 footprint

DSL 9.3%

Legacy copper (ADSL/VDSL2/G.fast)

Federal broadband speed-tier distribution Horizontal bar showing the share of 663,061 FCC Form 477 deployment filings across the five federal speed-threshold bands. <3/0.768 18.0% 3/0.768 → 25/3 42.0% 25/3 → 100/20 25.0% 100/20 → 1G 10.0% ≥1G/100 Sub-broadband 33,153 Legacy 119,351 Standard 278,486 Giga-capable 165,765 Gigabit+ 66,306 663,061 filings · 5 federal speed-threshold bands
Maryland federal speed-tier composition (sub-3/0.768 → ≥1G/100, FCC Form 477)

What the FCC Data Shows for Maryland

Maryland has 47 distinct broadband providers on file with the FCC and 663,061 total deployment records across all technology types. The state's average maximum advertised download speed sits at 189.9 Mbps — at or above the federal 100/20 Mbps broadband benchmark. That headline figure is the mean across every filing, so it weights provider-by-census-block records equally rather than weighting by population, which means rural filings pull the average as much as urban ones.

The technology mix in Maryland is led by cable, with fiber accounting for 5.9% of filings, cable 12.0%, and DSL 9.3%. Fiber share is the single best indicator of future-proofed infrastructure because fiber supports symmetric multi-gigabit speeds and scales without rewiring; cable share signals incumbent coverage in suburbs and cities; DSL share typically correlates with legacy copper footprints in smaller towns and rural pockets where no newer technology has arrived yet.

ViaSat, Inc. files the most deployment records in Maryland at 145,247, with Hughes Network Systems, LLC second at 136,555. The dominant technology line by filing count is Fixed Wireless Licensed, which alone accounts for 418,357 records. Remember that Form 477 counts provider filings, not homes actually connected, so a block with five providers shows up as five records — useful for measuring competition and coverage breadth, but not a direct proxy for subscriber counts or real-world speeds at any specific address.

Technology Breakdown

Disclaimer: Data from FCC Form 477. For informational purposes only. Coverage percentages are based on provider filings and may overstate actual availability at specific addresses. Speed figures represent maximum advertised speeds, not guaranteed performance. Always verify availability directly with providers.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many broadband providers serve Maryland?

According to FCC Form 477 data, 47 broadband providers have filed deployment records in Maryland.

What is the average download speed in Maryland?

The average maximum advertised download speed across all providers in Maryland is 189.9 Mbps, based on FCC deployment filings.

What broadband technologies are available in Maryland?

Maryland has broadband coverage through multiple technologies including fiber (5.9%), cable (12.0%), and DSL (9.3%).

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainBroadband Editorial