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Business Internet
Built for Reliability

Compare dedicated fiber, broadband, and SD-WAN solutions from commercial providers. Enterprise-grade connectivity with SLA guarantees.

Why Business Internet?

Dedicated Bandwidth

Symmetrical upload and download speeds with no shared connections. Guaranteed throughput 24/7.

SLA Guarantees

99.99% uptime SLAs with service credits. Your business stays connected when it matters.

Priority Support

24/7 dedicated business support with 4-hour on-site response for critical issues.

Scalable Solutions

From small office to enterprise campus. Scale bandwidth on demand as your business grows.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between business and residential internet?
Business internet typically offers symmetrical upload and download speeds, a service-level agreement (SLA) with uptime guarantees, priority technical support, and static IP addresses. Residential plans are designed for consumer usage patterns and usually have slower upload speeds and no SLA. Visit our dedicated fiber page to learn more about enterprise-grade options.
Do I need a dedicated internet connection for my business?
It depends on your usage. If your business relies heavily on cloud applications, VoIP phone systems, or processes large file transfers, a dedicated fiber connection ensures guaranteed bandwidth that is not shared with other users. Smaller offices with fewer than ten employees can often perform well on a standard business broadband plan.
What internet speed does a small business need?
A small business with five to ten employees should plan for at least 100 Mbps download and 50 Mbps upload. If your team uses video conferencing, cloud-based tools, or handles point-of-sale transactions, 200-500 Mbps is a safer baseline. Use our search tool to compare business plans available at your location.
What is an SLA for business internet?
An SLA, or service-level agreement, is a contract between you and your ISP that guarantees a minimum level of uptime, usually 99.9% or higher. If the provider fails to meet that commitment, you typically receive service credits on your bill. SLAs are standard with dedicated fiber and most commercial internet plans but are rarely included in residential service.
Can I use residential internet for my business?
You can, but it comes with trade-offs. Residential plans lack uptime guarantees, priority support, and may have terms of service that restrict commercial use like running servers. For a home-based business with light internet needs, a residential plan may suffice. For anything mission-critical, a business-class provider is the safer choice.