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[Update: 10 cities] Google Fiber ‘2 Gig’ launches for $100/month with new Wi-Fi 6 router

In September, Google Fiber announced a ‘2 Gig’ tier, and it’s now widely available in the first cities. As part of this, a Wi-Fi 6 Google Fiber Multi-Gig Router is provided to customers.

Update 4/7: Google announced today that 2 Gig Fiber is now available in Kansas City, presumably both Kansas and Missouri.

No matter how smart your home is, if your household needs 70 simultaneous 4K streams (yes, we said 70), or if most of your reality is virtual these days, 2 Gig can keep up.


Update 3/31: Charlotte, North Carolina is the latest city to get Google Fiber 2 Gig. New and existing customers can check availability here with nine locations across the country now eligible.


Update 2/2: The new 2 Gig plan is now available in Austin (Texas), Raleigh-Durham (North Carolina), and Irvine (California), though the site has yet to be updated. This brings the total to eight cities since publicly launching in early December.


Update 1/26: Google Fiber is now offering 2 Gig in Atlanta, Georgia. The ISP today also explained how you get the fastest speeds over a wired Cat 6 cable and recommended an adapter/dongle if your device lacks an ethernet port designed for 2.5 Gbps or higher.


Update 1/21/21: Following the initial December debut, Google Fiber 2 Gig is now available in Salt Lake Valley and Provo, Utah. These launches are in line with the ISP’s plan to bring the faster option to “most” existing Fiber cities early this year.


Original 12/3/20: In recent years, Google Fiber has moved to just offer a single “1 Gig” plan at $70. For $100 in Nashville, Tennessee and Huntsville, Alabama, new and existing customers can upgrade to “2 Gig” now. 

It’s catered as being “ready for power users, the latest devices, and advanced smart homes that use lots of internet.” Google estimates that you can download a 2.5-hour 1080p movie in 28.5 seconds, while it takes a 4K film just 1.2 minutes. A 10GB game is rated at taking 42.2 seconds. The 2 Gig plan does not currently offer symmetrical uploads, which is at 1 gigabit per second. 

As part of a set-up process that requires “professional installation,” customers have to use the “Google Fiber Multi-Gig Router.” Leveraging the latest Wi-Fi 6 standard, the ISP custom-developed it with an unspecified “technology partner.” It features 4×4 MU-MIMO 2.4 GHz and 4×4 MU-MIMO 5 GHz, as well as WPA3. The port accompaniment includes:

  • 1-port 10G Ethernet port
  • 4-port autosensing 10/100/1000 Base-T Ethernet LAN switch
  • Dual band IEEE 802.11ax (4×4)
  • 1 FXS POTS port
  • 1 USB 3.0 master port

It includes a “tri-band Mesh Extender extends Wi-Fi coverage and adds a second 5Ghz band.” This component is tall and triangular-shaped with the following connections:

  • Two GigE LAN
  • 2x 1-Gigabit Ethernet ports with LED

This device is notable as the 1 Gig plan just uses Google Wifi, while Fiber in the early days provided a custom “Network Box.”

Looking forward, testing in other locations — the ISP currently offers service in 19 — starts this fall, with a launch in “most” Google Fiber and Google Fiber Webpass cities early next year.

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Avatar for Abner Li Abner Li

Editor-in-chief. Interested in the minutiae of Google and Alphabet. Tips/talk: abner@9to5g.com