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Independent guide — not the government, not a Lifeline provider

Updated July 2026 · CPUC/FCC data as of December 31, 2024

California Broadband Map

The California Broadband Map is an interactive county-by-county guide to internet coverage, adoption, served households, and priority unserved areas across California. Updated July 2026 using CPUC/FCC data as of December 31, 2024, it helps residents, advocates, local governments, and providers see where fixed broadband is strong, where gaps remain, and which coverage layers can answer provider, speed, satellite, business, and mobile wireless questions.

Served 25/3

97.62%

Adoption

79.28%

Priority unserved

340,667

California fixed broadband

County map

What this map shows

California broadband coverage, adoption, and unserved households

This broadband map California reference page turns official government data into a simpler county-first view. The live map compares the share of households offered fixed broadband at 25 Mbps down and 3 Mbps up, the share of priority unserved households below 10 Mbps down and 1 Mbps up, and fixed broadband adoption based on consumer connections.

The data comes from the California Public Utilities Commission and the Federal Communications Commission. The CPUC says it collects broadband availability data once a year and displays it through the California Interactive Broadband Map. The state map currently identifies its displayed CPUC and FCC availability data as of December 31, 2024. This page uses that same public-data window and is updated as a readable companion, not as a replacement for the official address lookup tools.

In practice, the page is useful for three different jobs: spotting counties where broadband gaps remain, explaining what "served" and "priority unserved" mean in plain English, and organizing the available coverage layers for people who need provider, speed, fixed, satellite, business, or mobile wireless context.

Available coverage layers

California broadband provider and coverage layers

These sections keep the county summary, residential fixed broadband coverage in California, business fixed broadband, satellite broadband availability, and mobile wireless coverage by county on one page. They should not be treated as separate search pages; they are supporting layers that make this California broadband map more useful than a thin link directory.

County summary / Residential

County Deployment & Adoption Summary (Residential)

Live on the map

Use this county broadband map layer to compare California internet coverage, adoption, served households, and priority unserved households across all 58 counties.

County-level CPUC/FCC household deployment and adoption data for all 58 California counties.

Coverage
County summary
Audience
Residential
Layer type
County metrics

Best for: Fast county comparisons, rankings, and public-facing summaries.

Measures: All households, Served households, Unserved households, Priority unserved households, Consumer fixed broadband connections, Adoption rate

Fixed terrestrial / Residential

Residential Fixed Broadband Coverage in California

Provider coverage available

This residential fixed broadband coverage layer is the provider-and-speed companion to the county map, useful for understanding which fixed providers report service in California communities.

Provider coverage areas for residential fixed terrestrial broadband.

Coverage
Fixed terrestrial
Audience
Residential
Layer type
Coverage areas
Features
632
Providers
156

Best for: Provider, technology, and advertised-speed filters for residential fixed broadband.

Measures: Provider name, Connection technology, Advertised download speed, Advertised upload speed, Coverage area

Fixed terrestrial / Business

Business Fixed Broadband Coverage in California

Provider coverage available

This business broadband coverage layer helps analysts compare commercial provider availability, connection technology, and advertised speeds across California.

Provider coverage areas for business fixed terrestrial broadband.

Coverage
Fixed terrestrial
Audience
Business
Layer type
Coverage areas
Features
1,051
Providers
167

Best for: Commercial broadband availability, provider filters, and business-speed comparisons.

Measures: Provider name, Connection technology, Advertised download speed, Advertised upload speed, Coverage area

Satellite / Residential

Residential Satellite Broadband Coverage

Coverage layer available

This satellite broadband layer separates residential satellite availability from fixed terrestrial service so rural and remote coverage questions are easier to interpret.

Satellite coverage areas for residential broadband deployment.

Coverage
Satellite
Audience
Residential
Layer type
Coverage areas

Best for: Separating satellite availability from terrestrial fixed broadband availability.

Measures: Coverage area

Additional layer details should be verified during the overlay preparation pass before public filtering is enabled.

Satellite / Business

Satellite Business Broadband Coverage

Coverage layer available

This business satellite layer helps separate satellite availability from wired and fixed wireless options for employers, field offices, and rural commercial locations.

Satellite coverage areas for business broadband deployment.

Coverage
Satellite
Audience
Business
Layer type
Coverage areas

Best for: Business satellite availability and speed comparisons.

Measures: Coverage area

Additional layer details should be verified during the overlay preparation pass before public filtering is enabled.

Mobile wireless / Mobile

Mobile Wireless Deployment Coverage

Coverage layer available

This mobile wireless coverage layer supports mobile broadband and wireless deployment questions by county and region, separate from fixed home internet availability.

Mobile wireless coverage areas for California broadband deployment.

Coverage
Mobile wireless
Audience
Mobile
Layer type
Coverage areas

Best for: Separate mobile wireless coverage maps once the layer is prepared for browser overlays.

Measures: Coverage area

Additional layer details should be verified during the overlay preparation pass before public filtering is enabled.

How to check your address or county

Use the county map here, then verify address-level coverage

Start with the county selector on this page if you want a fast regional answer: served percentage, adoption rate, and priority unserved households. This is the best view for comparing Fresno County with Los Angeles County, checking rural counties, or explaining where California broadband gaps are concentrated.

If you need an internet coverage map by address, use the official California or FCC address tools after you review the county picture. Address-level maps are better for finding internet providers by address because a provider may serve one side of a road, apartment building, or census block but not another. Enter the full street address, compare reported providers and advertised speeds, and check whether fixed, satellite, mobile, or fixed wireless service is being shown.

Treat the results as a starting point, not a final bill quote. Broadband maps are based on provider-reported data and public collection cycles. Before ordering service, confirm price, taxes, equipment, installation, speed tier, contract terms, and whether the provider can actually activate service at the exact unit or address.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do broadband maps show coverage areas?

Yes. Broadband maps can show coverage areas, provider availability, advertised speeds, adoption, and unserved locations, depending on the layer. This page focuses on county-level California broadband metrics and catalogs the coverage layers that can support more detailed fixed, satellite, business, and mobile overlays.

Which internet is best in California?

The best internet in California depends on the address. Fiber is usually the strongest option when available, cable is often widely available in cities and suburbs, and fixed wireless, satellite, or mobile service may matter more in rural areas. Use the county map for regional context, then verify provider and speed options with an address-level map.

Who has the cheapest internet in California?

The cheapest internet in California varies by address, provider, eligibility, taxes, and equipment fees. Many low-income households should compare Lifeline-compatible internet options, local ISP low-income plans, and any city or county programs before choosing a plan.

Who has internet for $10 a month in California?

Some eligible households can get close to $10 per month, or sometimes less, when a low-income internet plan is combined with the federal Lifeline benefit. Lifeline provides up to $9.25 per month toward phone, internet, or bundled service for qualifying households, but the final price depends on provider availability at the address.

Free or low-cost internet

Think you might qualify for $0-$10/month internet?

If a broadband map shows service at your address but the price is still the barrier, check Lifeline and low-income internet options. The federal Lifeline benefit can lower eligible phone, internet, or bundled service bills, and some households can combine it with participating low-cost internet plans.

Data sources and methodology

How this California broadband map companion is built

This page uses public CPUC and FCC broadband deployment, adoption, provider, speed, satellite, business, and mobile wireless data. The live county view is intentionally narrow: it summarizes county-level household deployment, fixed broadband adoption, served households, unserved households, and priority unserved households. That makes the map quick to load and easy to cite, while the coverage layer catalog explains which detailed data can support future overlays.

The CPUC Broadband Mapping Program describes the California Interactive Broadband Map as a tool for looking up broadband speeds and service providers. The CPUC annual broadband data page identifies the annual collection used for California provider availability data, and the FCC Broadband Data Collection provides national availability data that can be checked against the FCC map. We link to those official sources because this page is meant to make the data easier to understand, not to replace government records.

County percentages are displayed as reported in the source data. Served means fixed broadband offered at at least 25 Mbps downstream and 3 Mbps upstream. Priority unserved means service below 10 Mbps downstream and 1 Mbps upstream. Adoption is shown as consumer fixed broadband connections divided by households offered service. Provider coverage counts are used as a catalog signal, not as a guarantee that any specific provider can serve a specific address today.