Advertiser Disclosure: We may earn commissions when you buy through links on our site. Learn more

SRT Speed Test

Enter a zip code, city, or address below to see what speeds you can expect in your location for SRT and other ISPs.

Ready to Test

Download Speed Testing
0 100 250 500 750 1000 0.0 Mbps
Upload Speed Testing
0 100 250 500 750 1000 0.0 Mbps

How we measure: a real-world test to a neutral point on the open internet, not a server inside your provider network, so it reflects everyday speed and can read slightly below best-case on-network tests.

We record anonymized results (speed, latency, your provider and coarse location) to publish honest, real-world speed data by provider. No personal information is stored.

Rate your provider

Share your experience to help others in your area choose.

Overall
Jump to: What to Expect | Speed Reviews | SRT Availability

What to Expect from SRT

SRT's fastest available plans reach 2,000 Mbps down / 2,000 Mbps up, and across its footprint typical available speeds are about 1,786 Mbps down / 1,786 Mbps up. These are advertised “up to” figures from FCC availability data, so no connection reaches them exactly. Run the test above to see what your own SRT line actually delivers.

SRT Measured Speeds

Compare providers near you

Enter your ZIP or city to see how providers in your area compare.

Providers available in your area come from our coverage data. "Available up to" is the fastest advertised plan; measured speeds appear once a provider has enough independent tests, otherwise we say "collecting" rather than guess.

SRT Speed Reviews

SRT has a speed rating of 4.50 out of 5, with a total of 2 reviews and ratings across the United States. Speed ratings by service type include: Fiber: 4.50. If you'd like to tell others about your experience, you can rate or review SRT here.

Connection

Customer Rating

Fiber

Fiber: 4.50 of 5 stars

(2)

For detailed reviews, visit our SRT Internet Reviews page.

Top Cities for SRT

SRT is available in 73 cities throughout the country. Here is a list of top cities with SRT internet service:

Minot, ND
  • Availability: 99.61%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,974 Mbps
Burlington, ND
  • Availability: 99.60%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,939 Mbps
Surrey, ND
  • Availability: 99.94%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,911 Mbps
Velva, ND
  • Availability: 100.00%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Mohall, ND
  • Availability: 98.94%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Towner, ND
  • Availability: 83.55%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Sawyer, ND
  • Availability: 100.00%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Glenburn, ND
  • Availability: 88.20%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Ruthville, ND
  • Availability: 100.00%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,997 Mbps
Berthold, ND
  • Availability: 99.00%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Bottineau, ND
  • Availability: 14.40%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Westhope, ND
  • Availability: 100.00%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Des Lacs, ND
  • Availability: 99.33%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,014 Mbps
Lansford, ND
  • Availability: 97.77%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps
Granville, ND
  • Availability: 98.17%
  • Avg. Download Speed: 1,000 Mbps

SRT Speed Test FAQ

Why is my SRT speed lower than advertised?

Advertised speeds are “up to” peaks measured on an ideal connection. Real-world speed to a neutral point on the open internet runs a few percent lower, and Wi-Fi, older equipment, or peak-hour congestion lower it further. For the truest read of your SRT line, test over a wired connection.

How does ISPReports measure SRT speeds?

Tests run against the nearest of Cloudflare's edge locations, so the result reflects your access network rather than a server inside SRT's own network. We verify each result by network operator, aggregate it as a median (not an average, which a few fast tests would skew), and only publish a provider's measured speeds once enough independent tests exist. We do not accept provider-submitted numbers.

Is SRT good for gaming and video calls?

Run the test above. The connection-quality grade reads latency under load and packet loss, which determine whether calls and games stay smooth, beyond the raw download number.