AT&T’s New Fiber Plans Arrive June 7
Is an $85 monthly price good enough to make you switch?
Jun 3, 2026 | Share
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AT&T has remixed prices on its home internet plans and mobile bundles. Starting June 7, you could get a premium phone plan and fiber internet to your front door starting at $85 per month.
The changes follow a trend of lower prices on internet service nationwide, and they put the entry-level internet plan right at our price and speed recommendation for the average household: Speeds of at least 300Mbps for $50 per month.
With bundle discounts, you could get AT&T Fiber Internet for $35 and add a single mobile line for as little as $50 per month (or four lines for as little as $30 each).
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It’s refreshing news for AT&T’s 10 million existing internet customers, and could be a reason for customers to switch throughout its fiber footprint of more than 30 million homes and businesses.
With the recent acquisition of Lumen’s Quantum Fiber assets, AT&T Fiber has become the biggest fiber internet provider in the U.S.

Changes for each AT&T speed tier
The fastest plan saw the biggest cuts in AT&T’s recent plan remix. If you subscribe to a 5 GIG plan, your bill will decrease from $140 per month to $125 per month. You can save an extra $25 if you bundle with certain AT&T Wireless plans.
5 GIG customers will also get All-Fi Pro included at no extra cost. The program, valued at $25, includes as many mesh Wi-Fi extenders as you need to get Wi-Fi in every room. You also get free access to AT&T Active Armor, a suite of internet security software that includes a VPN, identity protection service, and advanced parental controls.
At the 1 GIG level, the price for internet alone will change to $80 per month. That’s a $15 increase compared to the previous pricing scheme, but your internet bill could drop to $60 if you add a wireless plan.

AT&T will stop offering its 100Mbps plan to fiber customers, and its 300Mbps plan will cost $5 less. With bundling, the price drops to just $35 per month.
The price for AT&T Internet Air, which offers 5G home internet rather than fiber internet, is unaffected at $60 per month.
Backup internet perks for bundle customers
Along with changing prices, AT&T doubled down on its backup internet perk for bundle customers. If your AT&T Fiber goes down, your gateway will automatically switch over to an AT&T 5G connection to power your local network. Once the fiber’s back up, your gateway will switch back.
The perk isn’t a change compared to AT&T’s previous backup internet offering, but it’s nice to see it set in stone.
“Keeping our customers connected is what matters most, and while AT&T Fiber has over 99.9% proven reliability, we want our customers to stay connected when they need it most,” AT&T said in the release.
Qualifying AT&T Wireless plans
The new bundle discounts will be available for any customers who pair a postpaid AT&T Wireless plan with an AT&T Fiber plan. Prices start at $50 per month for one line of AT&T Value, but you can drop the per-line price to $30 per month if you have four lines per plan.
New prices for AT&T Wireless plans were announced in March, 2026.
How AT&T Fiber stacks up against 5G and cable competitors
Due to AT&T’s size, it competes with nearly every other major internet provider in the U.S., but its biggest competitors are T-Mobile 5G Home Internet, Xfinity, and Spectrum.
All these providers now include internet connection equipment at no extra cost, and all use fiber as the backbone of their networks. However, AT&T stands alone in offering fiber internet cabling all the way to customer homes. Compared to cable internet, you will still pay about $10 more per month for AT&T Fiber, and you don’t get a multi-year price lock.
T-Mobile’s entry-level 5G plan offers speeds up to 318Mbps, at a price of $50 per month. You get a sweet price lock and a discount of $15 if you bundle with T-Mobile wireless, but 5G speeds are notorious for high latency and variability based on location and time of day.
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My take: Don’t overpay for speed
I love to see straightforward pricing from a big name like AT&T, but I would be even happier if AT&T joined some of its competitors and started offering multi-year price locks.
Whether or not you can get a price lock, you can save by knowing how much speed you really need. The slowest speed tier on offer from most providers in 2026 is 300Mbps, and that’s plenty fast enough for streaming in 4K, working and studying from home, and casual gaming.
I tell my friends and family to start with the cheapest available home internet plans, and then upgrade only if they run into bandwidth issues (and they’re sure it’s not a router problem). In this tough economy, every dollar counts!
Author - Chili Palmer
Chili Palmer covers home tech services, with a special focus on understanding what families need and how they can stay connected on a budget. She handles internet access and affordability, breaking news, mobile services, and consumer trends. Chili’s work as a writer, reporter, and editor has appeared in publications including Telecompetitor, Utah Business, Idaho Business Review, Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, and Switchful.com.
Editor - Kevin Parrish
Kevin Parrish has more than a decade of experience working as a writer, editor, and product tester. He began writing about computer hardware and soon branched out to other devices and services such as networking equipment, phones and tablets, game consoles, and other internet-connected devices. His work has appeared in Tom’s Hardware, Tom's Guide, Maximum PC, Digital Trends, Android Authority, How-To Geek, Lifewire, and others. At HighSpeedInternet.com, he focuses on network equipment testing and review.




