As far as home broadband platforms go, fixed wireless, though faster than digital subscriber line, is far less capable than fiber to home or hybrid fiber coax platforms. So why is fixed wireless growing as a percentage of U.S. home broadband accounts?
In 2023, for example, virtually 100 percent of U.S. net home broadband net account additions for the internet service providers with 90 percent of more of total market share.
Though we often seem to focus on the headline speeds and services, customers do not always want to buy those services.
Price-value relationships seem to matter most. In many parts of the United States, the competition is DSL and HFC. And there, fixed wireless is faster than DSL and more affordable than HFC.
By most estimates, only about 30 percent of U.S. home locations have the ability to buy a fiber-to-home service. If so, then roughly 70 percent of the U.S. home broadband market is potentially amenable to fixed wireless purchases for those customers who want speeds faster than DSL but do not wish to pay the going rate for HFC service at speeds above 200 Mbps.
In 2023, for example, virtually all net account additions in the U.S. market were supported by fixed wireless. Both FTTH and HFC platforms lost net accounts, according to Leichtman Research Group.
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