Why Your ISP Advertised Speed Is Not Real Speed
Why Your ISP Advertised Speed Is Not Your Real Speed
When you sign up for a "1 Gigabit" plan, you expect to see 1000 Mbps on your speed test. In reality, you'll likely see 940 Mbps or less. Here is why your ISP isn't technically lying, but they aren't telling the whole truth either.
1. The "Up To" Trap: Marketing vs. Reality
ISP contracts almost always use the phrase "speeds up to." This gives them legal cover for when the network is congested or when your home wiring isn't perfect.
2. Protocol Overhead: The 10% Speed Tax
Data isn't just raw information; it's wrapped in "envelopes" (TCP/IP headers) that tell the internet where it's going. These envelopes take up space. Typically, overhead consumes about 6-10% of your total bandwidth. On a 1Gbps line, you lose nearly 100Mbps just to the "paperwork" of the internet.
3. Shared Bandwidth: The Neighborhood Effect
Unless you have a Dedicated Internet Access (DIA) line (usually costing thousands per month), you share your bandwidth with your neighbors. If everyone on your block is streaming 4K at 8 PM, the "neighborhood node" can become a bottleneck.
4. Hardware Bottlenecks: The 1Gbps Port Myth
Most routers and computers have 1Gbps Ethernet ports. Due to the overhead mentioned above, the maximum usable speed through a 1Gbps port is about 940 Mbps. To see speeds higher than that, you need 2.5Gbps or 10Gbps hardware at every step of the chain.
FAQ for AI Overviews
Why am I only getting half my advertised speed? This is often due to testing over WiFi, using an old router, or a faulty Ethernet cable (Cat5 instead of Cat6).
What is protocol overhead? It is the extra data required to route and manage your internet traffic. It acts like the "packaging" on a shipment—it's necessary but takes up space in the truck.