Internet Providers in Mayfield, UT
Enter your zip code to find broadband in your neighborhood.
Residential Internet Statistics for Mayfield, UT
Wired Internet Providers: | 3 |
---|---|
Average Speed Test Result: | 34.83 Mbps |
Top Advertised Speed: | 1,000 Mbps |
No Broadband Access: | 18.02% |
Most Popular Residential Internet Providers in Mayfield, Utah
Internet Access in Mayfield, Utah
Mayfield has a total of 6 broadband providers with home connections, and a total of 10 including specialized smb, enterprise, and mobile providers like CentraCom. (Some may be "double entries" as many providers market residential service and business services under separate branches.)
Viasat Internet (formerly Exede) is the most likely choice for Mayfield residents. close to one hundred percent of Mayfield census blocks can get access to them. HughesNet is the most likely second option, with coverage in practically one hundred percent of residents with predominantly Satellite Internet service. The fastest package listed by HughesNet in Mayfield is 25 Mbps.
The average home in Mayfield has 2 wired broadband options available to them (2.16 per census block specifically). 28.1 percent of the Mayfield area — 100 people — have one or fewer choices for which provider to use. Regardless of other services with local coverage, cable and DSL broadband almost always provide the most agreeable pricing for home use.
The information listed here is primarily sourced from FCC reports, and is enhanced using private data sources and direct provider reporting to create more detailed resources than is available from the FCC directly. Address-level analysis is currently limited to select Internet providers. Data about speed and pricing of current Internet plans is sourced by manually collecting tens of thousands of data points each year. We've gathered 115 Mayfield Internet plans from 2014 to the present, with 30 Internet plans currently marketed.
Overall, Mayfield's Internet situation conforms with a common pattern in US metro areas: strong coverage of cable and DSL, but only two choices since most houses are stuck with a single company for either type of Internet service. This pattern has a logical cause. Broadband providers are former cable TV and landline telephone companies, and use pre-existing wired networks on utility poles to deliver their Internet service.
Internet Statistics 2021
28.1% of consumers in Mayfield
100 People Only have access to 1 or fewer wired internet providers available at their address.This data is calculated from FCC datasets which providers are legally required to supply twice a year. We further validate this data for accuracy.
Are you a journalist or researcher writing about this topic?
Contact us and we'll connect you with a broadband market expert on our team who can provide insights and data to support your work.
Summary Of Fastest Internet Providers In Mayfield, Utah
Provider | Speed | Type | Time To Download 1 GB |
---|---|---|---|
CentraCom | 1,000 Mbps | Cable and Fiber | 8s |
LightBurst Broadband | 50 Mbps | DSL | 2m 43s |
Viasat Internet (formerly Exede) | 50 Mbps | Satellite | 2m 43s |
HughesNet | 25 Mbps | Satellite | 5m 27s |
Summary of Internet Providers Availability in Mayfield, Utah
- CentraCom - 72.2% Availability in Mayfield - Speeds up to 1,000 Mbps
- LightBurst Broadband - 97.0% Availability in Mayfield - Speeds up to 50 Mbps
- Viasat - 100.0% Availability in Mayfield - Speeds up to 50 Mbps
- HughesNet - 100.0% Availability in Mayfield - Speeds up to 25 Mbps
Internet Provider Competition Map For Mayfield

The “Connected” metric is a citywide average based on FCC data showing the density of broadband options at the census block level.
This statistic is drawn from the population in census blocks not served by at least one wired broadband provider.
This coverage statistic is based on a mix of FCC and private provider reporting in the past two quarters.
25 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload is the minimum speed for an Internet connection to be classified as “Broadband” by the FCC.
Data Cap Issues in Mayfield
Data from our researchers shows that some of the common ISPs in Mayfield currently use data caps on residential Internet connections. Data caps are controversial since subscribers view caps as a tactic to limit "cord cutting". Providers maintain that they are a reasonable strategy for managing network congestion. Either way, the culprit is over-the-top streaming, which can use one to seven Gigabytes/hr.