Internet Access in Honeyville, Utah
Information here is calculated based on biannual FCC coverage reporting. We leverage direct provider reports to further validate and enhance the data. Plane and pricing data is hand-gathered by our research team. To date, we've analyzed 339 Internet plans in Honeyville since 2014. Speed test data in the graph below is limited to 3 records as of 2022. This gives a snapshot of what some subscribers are getting in the area, but trends low since tests are usually run to diagnose home networking issues.
Rise Broadband is a common second choice to the primary providers, serving Honeyville with a maximum speed of 50 Mbps. Wired Internet isn't the only way to get Internet access in Honeyville. fixed wireless outfits such as Blue Spring Broadband are able to achieve 25 Mbps or more using wireless hardware. Outside of residential broadband, there are 4 providers in Honeyville marketing enterprise and business/smb services such as T1 and MPLS. The small business listings here include all providers with business plans on their site, but home providers might have unlisted business packages as well.
Viasat Internet is the most common provider in Honeyville. practically one hundred percent of the Honeyville area can receive access to them. HughesNet is the most likely second choice, providing practically one hundred percent of residents with Satellite service. HughesNet's strongest plan in Honeyville is 25 megabits per second download.
The average Honeyville household has 4 providers at a given address, or precisely 4.06 ISPs in each census block. Only 2.72 percent of the Honeyville population are limited to one or fewer options for Internet.
The takeaway here is that Honeyville's broadband infrastructure conforms with a common pattern in US cities: wide coverage for bundled cable and DSL, but only two choices since a majority of houses are limited to only one company for setting up either type of Internet service. This pattern has a simple cause. Broadband service providers used to be television and phone corporations. So, they already own pre-existing wired networks to deliver Internet services.