Google Fiber launched in Kansas City in 2012 with a goal of forcing the incumbents to compete on price. The footprint never went national, but in the cities where Google Fiber landed, retail pricing pressure has been real.
The Google Fiber Business product is straightforward: published rates, symmetrical fiber, no contract gymnastics. If they reach your address, they are usually the cheapest fiber option in the metro.
GFiber Business: what the footprint looks like in 2026
Google Fiber for Business and GFiber Webpass are owned by Google Fiber Inc., which GFiber identifies as an Alphabet company; Alphabet Inc. is publicly traded as NASDAQ: GOOGL and GOOG, and GFiber's public materials do not disclose a material ownership change for this business between 2023 and 2026. GFiber says it is active or expanding across 19 states, and its business and Webpass materials document metro business deployments in Chicago, Denver, Miami, San Diego, and Seattle, with Austin and Nashville also referenced in the Google Fiber Webpass integration materials.
GFiber's May 22, 2025 small-business terms update codified current business terms under the GFiber brand and confirmed the service is provided by Google Fiber Inc. and its subsidiaries, reflecting the company's continuing post-rebrand consolidation of Google Fiber and Webpass operations. On the billing side, GFiber Webpass's support and terms pages show a specific paperless and autopay-heavy billing model: bills are sent only by email, recurring charges are collected automatically from the designated payment method, and equipment not returned within 60 days after cancellation can trigger a replacement fee. BBB complaints also include 2025 billing and performance disputes against Webpass.
As of May 2026, Google Fiber's public small-business page lists Business 1 Gig at $100 a month and Business 2 Gig at $250 a month, while the GFiber Webpass business page lists Business 1 Gig starting at $100 a month. Those are the headline anchors the rest of this guide compares against.
What Google Fiber sells
Three main business plans.
- Google Fiber Business 1 Gig. $100 a month. Symmetrical, no contract, no equipment fee, no data caps.
- Google Fiber Business 2 Gig. $250 a month. Symmetrical, no contract.
- Google Fiber Business 5 Gig and 8 Gig. Custom quote, used by larger offices and higher-density use cases.
The pricing is the same in every Google Fiber market. There is no haggling, no retention rate, no auto-renewal cliff. The number on the website is the number you pay.
Where Google Fiber serves
The active business markets in 2026 include Kansas City, Austin, Provo, Salt Lake City, Nashville, Charlotte, Raleigh-Durham, Atlanta, Huntsville, Orange County (CA), San Antonio, Mesa, and parts of West Des Moines.
If you are in one of these metros, the question is not whether Google Fiber is competitive. The question is whether they reach your specific address. They build neighborhood by neighborhood, so two buildings on the same block can have different access.
What you should be paying
These are dedicated internet ranges from current carrier wholesale data, marked up to typical retail.
Google Fiber and peers, typical retail (mid 50%)
Monthly recurring charge, dedicated internet access (DIA). Numbers are derived from current carrier wholesale quotes. Shown as a metro-tier band where city-level data is thin.
| Speed | Typical retail (mid 50%) | Sample size |
|---|---|---|
| 100 Mbps | $610 – $800/mo | n = 6 |
| 500 Mbps | $955 – $1,315/mo | n = 5 |
| 1 Gbps | $1,195 – $1,605/mo | n = 7 |
| 10 Gbps | $2,190 – $2,760/mo | n = 6 |
If your bill sits above the high end of the band, you are likely overpaying.
Analyze My Bill FreeFor Google Fiber Business 1 Gig at $100 a month, the comparison is striking. AT&T Business Fiber at the same speed runs $150 to $230 in most markets. Comcast Business coax at 600 Mbps runs $150 to $230. Google Fiber sits 40 to 60 percent below the incumbent on price-to-speed where they have built.
When Google Fiber is the right answer
It fits when:
- Your address is in their footprint
- You want symmetrical upload for cloud backup, video, or VoIP
- You do not need a hard SLA with uptime credits
- You can run with the standard residential-grade support
It does not fit when:
- You need a guaranteed SLA with credits for downtime
- You require static IPs across a /28 or larger block
- Your address is not in the Google Fiber footprint
Most small offices do not need a hard SLA. For those businesses, the price-to-speed gap is large enough to make Google Fiber the obvious choice if available.
The two side charges to watch on Google Fiber bills
Google Fiber keeps the bill simple. There are still a couple of items to flag.
- Federal Universal Service Fund (FUSF) fee. Real federal tax. Should be small, often under $5 a month.
- State and local taxes. Vary by jurisdiction.
There is no equipment rental, no early termination fee, and no data cap fee.
How Google Fiber pricing changes at renewal
Google Fiber Business has no contract. The published rate is what you pay every month. Google has held the 1 Gig rate flat at $100 a month since 2018.
That stability is unusual in business broadband. The incumbents typically raise rates 5 to 8 percent a year. Google Fiber has not.
What to do this week
- Check the Google Fiber availability map at your business address. The result drives every other decision.
- If you are in their footprint, the math is usually straightforward. Get a quote and compare to your current bill including all side fees.
- If your address is not covered, use the Google Fiber published rate as your benchmark when negotiating with the incumbent.
Compare your current bill against Google Fiber and the rest of the market
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