Fiber vs. Cable vs. DSL vs. 5G Home – What Actually Delivers in 2026
Four broadband technologies compete for your home: fiber-to-the-home (FTTH), cable (DOCSIS 3.1), VDSL, and 5G fixed wireless. Each looks great on paper. Each has very different real-world behavior. Here's what to actually expect.
The short version
| Tech | Plan | Real median | Latency | Symmetric? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FTTH (fiber to home) | 1 Gbps | 900–960 Mbps | 3–6 ms | Yes |
| Cable (DOCSIS 3.1) | 1 Gbps | 650–850 Mbps | 15–30 ms | No (35 Mbps up) |
| VDSL / G.fast | 250 Mbps | 180–220 Mbps | 10–20 ms | No (40 Mbps up) |
| 5G fixed wireless | 500 Mbps | 80–400 Mbps, highly variable | 20–50 ms | No |
1. FTTH — actual fiber into the apartment
The cable is glass all the way to your unit. No copper, no signal loss. 1 Gbps symmetric is realistic, latency stays below 5 ms. Providers vary by country: Verizon Fios, AT&T Fiber, Frontier Fiber, Google Fiber, Ziply (US); BT Full Fibre, Hyperoptic (UK); Deutsche Glasfaser, Telekom FTTH (DE); Free, Orange, SFR (FR).
Watch out: the word "fiber" is used loosely. FTTN, FTTC, FTTB still have copper for the last segment. Real FTTH is sometimes called FTTU or FTTP. Ask explicitly.
2. Cable (DOCSIS 3.1)
Comcast Xfinity, Spectrum, Cox, Virgin Media. Up to 1 Gbps down — but upload caps at 35–50 Mbps, latency runs higher, and at peak hours (7–11 PM) your local segment is shared with the neighborhood. When the street is busy, 1000 Mbps can drop to 200.
Great for streaming and browsing, noticeably worse than fiber for video calls, cloud backup, and large uploads.
3. VDSL / G.fast
BT, Sky, TalkTalk in the UK; CenturyLink/Frontier copper in the US; Deutsche Telekom MagentaZuhause in DE. Up to 250 Mbps in theory. Real numbers depend heavily on cable distance from the cabinet: directly at the DSLAM you get 230 Mbps; 800 m away you get 100. Always run an availability check with multiple providers before signing.
4. 5G as a fixed-wireless home option
T-Mobile Home Internet, Verizon 5G Home, Three 5G Hub. Useful where fiber and good cable aren't available, but: data caps sometimes apply, latency is jittery, and in dense cities the cell is overloaded at peak hours. Treat it as a bridge, not a destination.
Is the fiber upgrade worth it?
For most households: yes, as soon as it's available. Four concrete reasons:
- Symmetric upload — vital for cloud, video calls, streaming creators
- Low latency — noticeable in gaming and conference calls
- Stability — no time-of-day collapse like on cable
- Future-proof — 10 Gbps is technically possible without changing the line
FAQ
Is 50 Mbps enough for a family of four?
Why does cable have so little upload?
I have fiber but speeds are bad — what now?
Measure what your line actually delivers.
→ Run the speed test