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How to Get Internet Early Termination Fees Waived 

Caroline Lefelhoc

Written by Caroline Lefelhoc - Pub. Jun 12, 2026 / Updated Jun 11, 2026

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Caroline Lefelhoc

About the author

Caroline Lefelhoc

Caroline Lefelhoc is a seasoned writer, copywriter, and editor with over five years of experience creating engaging, informative content. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Integrated Marketing Communications from the University of Akron. Notably, she has served as the copywriting director and lead copy editor for the luxury media conglomerate Haute Media Group. In addition to her leadership roles, Caroline is a freelance writer for businesses of all sizes across various industries, including many internet-based companies. Her expertise extends to the technology sector, where she has crafted content for tech startups and SaaS businesses. For CompareInternet.com, she provides helpful insight for consumers on internet technology, trends in remote work and learning, digital opportunity, software and Wi-Fi. Outside work, she enjoys testing new Pinterest recipes and spending time with her family—her husband, their one-year-old daughter, an enthusiastic golden retriever named Beckham, and two cats, Gryffindor and Toast.

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    How to Get Internet Early Termination Fees Waived 

    If you are staring down early termination fees on your internet contract, the first thing worth knowing is this: an ETF is not a wall. It is a negotiating position. Internet service providers enforce these fees selectively, waive them regularly for customers who know what to ask, and often reduce them when a full waiver is off the table. Most people stuck in an internet contract have far more options than they realize. Find out your options below. 

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    What Is an Internet Early Termination Fee?

    An early termination fee (ETF) is a charge your internet provider imposes when you cancel a fixed-term service contract before the agreed-upon end date. This is the provider’s way of recouping the promotional pricing or installation discounts they extended to you at signup.

    The fee structure varies by provider. Some use a prorated model, charging a flat amount (typically $10 to $15) for each month remaining on the contract. Other providers charge a fixed penalty regardless of how much time is left. 

    Here is a quick-reference breakdown of where major providers stood as of mid-2026:

    ProviderETFContract Required?
    Xfinity$0 (new plans)No
    Spectrum$0No
    AT&T Fiber$0No
    Cox$0No
    T-Mobile Home Internet$0No
    Verizon 5G Home Internet$0No
    HughesNetUp to $400 (prorated)Yes, 24 months
    Viasat (legacy plans)$15/remaining monthYes
    Viasat Unleashed$0No

    It is worth noting that the industry has shifted dramatically. By early 2026, all major cable and fiber providers had dropped annual contracts entirely, with SpectrumXfinity, and AT&T all moving to month-to-month plans. Today, ETFs are largely a satellite internet concern and a legacy issue for customers who signed contracts before this shift. If you are currently in a contract, it likely predates these changes or involves satellite service.

     

    person using laptop and caluclator

    When to get waived

     

    The Seven Situations Where You Can Get an ETF Waived

    1. You Are Moving Outside the Provider’s Service Area

    This is the strongest and most universally honored waiver trigger. If your provider cannot deliver service at your new address, they have no legal or practical basis to hold you to a contract for a service they cannot provide. Most providers waive the ETF automatically in this situation, and many are contractually or legally obligated to do so.

    How to use it: Before you call to cancel, request a service address check at your new address in writing or through the provider’s online portal. If they confirm no service is available, note that confirmation. When you call to cancel, state clearly: “You are unable to fulfill this contract at my new address. I am requesting that the early termination fee be waived." Have proof of your new address ready, such as a signed lease, a utility bill, or a USPS change-of-address confirmation.

    2. You Are an Active Duty Servicemember With Orders

    This one is not discretionary. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) is federal law, and it explicitly prohibits internet service providers from charging early termination fees when an active-duty servicemember receives deployment or permanent change of station (PCS) orders that take them to a location where service cannot be continued. The right extends to dependents who are beneficiaries of the contract as well.

    How to use it: Call your provider and ask specifically for their military or SCRA department, as most major ISPs maintain a dedicated line for this. Provide a copy of your orders showing the effective date. The SCRA allows you to request that cancellation take effect up to 30 days after your next billing cycle, giving you a clean exit without scrambling.

    3. The Account Holder Has Passed Away

    Every major internet provider has a bereavement policy that waives early termination fees when the primary account holder dies. Family members or estate executors handling the account should contact the provider’s account services line rather than the standard cancellation queue. A death certificate is the required documentation, and in many cases, providers will also clear any remaining balance on the account, though this varies by provider and circumstance.

    4. Your Provider Has Repeatedly Failed to Deliver Advertised Speeds

    This is the most underused waiver trigger and the most work to execute, but it is fully legitimate. When a provider consistently fails to deliver the speeds you are paying for, they are in material breach of the service agreement. The standard most providers use internally is documented, sustained failure over 30 or more days with no resolution.

    How to build the case: Run daily speed tests using (you can use our speed tool here) and screenshot every result with the timestamp visible. Each time your speeds fall significantly below the advertised rate, open a support ticket with the provider and record the ticket number and date. After 30 days of documented failures and unresolved tickets, call and state the following: “I have 30 days of documented speed test results showing consistent failure to deliver the speeds I am paying for, with [X] open support tickets and no resolution. I am requesting an ETF waiver on the grounds of material breach of service agreement."

    This approach is most effective against cable providers where network congestion is a documented problem. It is less useful for fiber connections, where speed complaints are less common.

    5. Your Provider Raised Prices Mid-Contract Without Adequate Notice

    Several states have consumer protection laws that allow customers to exit a contract without penalty when a provider raises prices during the term of the contract without providing adequate written notice. This protection is not federal, but it applies in California, New York, and several other states with strong consumer protection frameworks.

    How to use it: If your provider raised your rate mid-contract without giving you 30 days’ written notice, contact your state attorney general’s office or consumer protection bureau to understand your specific state’s provisions. If the protection applies, present your original contract showing the agreed rate, along with the bill showing the new rate, when you call to request the waiver.

    6. You Experienced a Prolonged Service Outage

    Extended outages, generally defined as 72 or more consecutive hours of documented service failure, can qualify for an ETF waiver with many providers on the grounds that the provider failed to deliver the contracted service. This trigger is discretionary at the federal level rather than legally mandated, but it is a widely accepted practice across the industry.

    When invoking this, have your outage ticket number, the confirmed start and end dates of the outage, and any service credits you received. Credits are particularly useful as documentation because they represent the provider’s formal acknowledgment that the outage occurred.

    7. Financial Hardship

    This is the most unpredictable of the seven triggers, and providers are under no legal obligation to honor it. That said, some providers, including Xfinity and Cox, have waived or significantly reduced ETFs for customers who can demonstrate genuine financial hardship. Ask specifically for the customer retention department rather than the standard cancellation line. Come prepared with a secondary ask, such as a prorated reduction or a payment plan, in case a full waiver is declined.

     

    older couple looking at laptop

    How to have a successful call

     

    How to Have the Conversation

    Regardless of which trigger applies to your situation, the mechanics of the call matter. A few principles that consistently produce better outcomes:

    Call, do not chat. Phone interactions give you more flexibility to escalate, and agents on phone lines tend to have more waiver authority than chat representatives.

    Ask for the retention department directly. The first agent who answers a cancellation line may not have the authority to waive an ETF. Retention teams do.

    Use neutral, factual language. Stating “you are unable to fulfill the terms of this contract" is more effective than expressing frustration. You are presenting a case, not lodging a complaint.

    Get confirmation in writing. Before ending the call, ask the agent to confirm the waiver or adjustment via email or through your online account. Note the agent’s name and the call time for your records.

    How to Avoid ETFs Entirely Going Forward

    The cleanest solution to an early termination fee is never signing a contract that has one. As of 2026, most major cable and fiber providers have moved to month-to-month plans with no ETF exposure. If you are shopping for a new provider, pay close attention to no-contract options.

    Before signing up with any provider, read the broadband label required to be displayed on all plan pages under FCC rules. It will clearly state whether a contract is required and what the ETF would be if you cancel early.

    Find Out Which No-Contract Providers Are Available at Your Address

    Knowing your rights around ETFs is half the equation. The other half is knowing which internet providers are competing for your business, because availability varies significantly by zip code, and more options at your address mean more leverage in every negotiation. Enter your zip code below to see which internet providers serve your home, compare plans side by side, and find out which ones offer month-to-month service with no early termination risk.

    Lower your internet bill

    61% of people overpay for their internet.
    Are you one of them?

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I negotiate my ETF down if I cannot get it fully waived?

    Yes, and this is often the realistic outcome when none of the formal waiver triggers apply. Retention departments have the authority to reduce ETFs, offer credits, or structure payment plans. Coming in with a specific counteroffer, such as agreeing to pay 50% of the fee in exchange for immediate cancellation, gives the agent something concrete to approve. Providers would rather collect something than pursue a collection action.

    Does moving always guarantee an ETF waiver?

    Moving outside the provider’s service coverage area is the most reliable trigger for a waiver, and in many cases, providers are contractually obligated to grant it. However, if you are moving within the same provider’s coverage area, the provider can offer to transfer service to your new address and may deny the waiver. Always confirm coverage at the new address before calling to cancel.

    How long does it take to get an ETF waiver processed?

    Most waivers are confirmed during the cancellation call or within one to two billing cycles. If a credit is applied to your account, it typically appears on your next statement. If you have already been charged the fee and are disputing it after the fact, the dispute process can take two to four weeks. Always request written confirmation regardless of when the waiver is granted.

    Sources

    [1] Viasat.com “Unlimited High-Speed Home Internet – Plans & Pricing."

    [8] ServicemembersCivilReliefAct.com “SCRA Military Benefits: Civil Relief Act Rights Explained."

    [9] MyArmyBenefits.us.army.mil “Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)."

    [10] MilitaryMoneyManual.com “Servicemembers Civil Relief Act 2026 | SCRA Updated."

    [11] SatelliteInternet.com “Viasat Internet Review: Plans, Pricing and Speeds 2026."

    [12] RuralInternetGuide.com “HughesNet Review 2026: Is It Still Worth It?"

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    Caroline Lefelhoc

    About the author

    Caroline Lefelhoc

    Caroline Lefelhoc is a seasoned writer, copywriter, and editor with over five years of experience creating engaging, informative content. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Integrated Marketing Communications from the University of Akron. Notably, she has served as the copywriting director and lead copy editor for the luxury media conglomerate Haute Media Group. In addition to her leadership roles, Caroline is a freelance writer for businesses of all sizes across various industries, including many internet-based companies. Her expertise extends to the technology sector, where she has crafted content for tech startups and SaaS businesses. For CompareInternet.com, she provides helpful insight for consumers on internet technology, trends in remote work and learning, digital opportunity, software and Wi-Fi. Outside work, she enjoys testing new Pinterest recipes and spending time with her family—her husband, their one-year-old daughter, an enthusiastic golden retriever named Beckham, and two cats, Gryffindor and Toast.

    How are You Using the Internet?

    (Please select all that apply)

    How many users?

    Streaming
    Working from Home
    Smart home Devices
    Online Gaming
    Web Browsing

    Your Recommended Speed:
    300 Mbps

    Why we picked this speed for you
      Call now to order [tel] [tel]

      Enter your ZIP code to find all Internet Service Providers available in your area

      Call Now for Exclusive Offers

      Speak with a specialist to unlock deals in your area

      [tel]
      Speed Result

      ✓ No obligation
      ✓ Free consultation
      ✓ Fast connection

      Start Over
      Loading...

      Calculating your best speed...