Home Network Faults Capped Gigabit Internet at 100Mbps, Not the ISP
Updated
Updated · How-To Geek · Jun 16
Home Network Faults Capped Gigabit Internet at 100Mbps, Not the ISP
2 articles · Updated · How-To Geek · Jun 16
Summary
100Mbps speed-test results on a gigabit plan traced back to in-home bottlenecks rather than the internet provider, after weeks of suspecting the ISP.
Cat5 cables, damaged wiring, aging routers, outdated firmware and slower network adapters can all choke a 1Gbps connection before it reaches the tested device.
Wi-Fi added another major limit: distance, walls, interference and poorly placed routers reduced throughput, while mesh systems using wireless backhaul slowed satellite nodes further.
Duplex mismatches can also force links down to 100Mbps; enabling auto-negotiation on both ends or setting 1000Mbps full duplex manually can restore full speed.
The takeaway is that gigabit service depends on every link in the chain—cables, ports, router, client device and placement—so troubleshooting must start inside the home.