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Written by Caroline Lefelhoc - Pub. Jul 15, 2026 / Updated Jul 15, 2026
Table of Contents
Are you happy with your Internet service?

About the author
Can ChatGPT help you choose an internet plan? That’s what I wanted to find out, so I ran a test. I opened the current version of ChatGPT (unpaid), told it I live in Lakewood, Ohio, and asked the kind of question any family might ask: what is the best internet plan for a household of four that streams constantly and has two parents working from home? I then proceeded to…chat…with ChatGPT about internet plans in my area. It was very clear to see what AI internet advice does well and where it can’t help. Below are the results.
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The question: “I live in Lakewood, Ohio. What’s the best internet plan for a family of four? We stream a lot, and both my husband and I work from home. What would you recommend?”
ChatGPT told me to prioritize fiber for a work-from-home household and explained why in plain terms. It said fiber gives you symmetrical speeds (which is true), and then it made the point concrete: on a typical cable plan, one person backing up photos to the cloud can buffer everyone else’s video calls because cable upload speeds are a fraction of download speeds. On fiber, that same household has room to spare. That is great advice and an easy-to-understand explanation.
It kept going, and kept being right. It warned me off data caps for a family that streams in 4K, and it put numbers to it. Streaming 4K burns through roughly seven to ten gigabytes an hour, so a family of streamers can burn through that pretty swiftly. It told me to hunt for new-customer promotions (great advice), to watch for the price jump when those promotions end (more great advice), and to buy my own mesh router rather than rent one month after month (you can save a chunk of change doing this). If you want to understand what you are shopping for, ChatGPT is a patient, clear tutor. As a general internet advisor, I think it proved its worth.
Then I asked it to shop for me in my area, and the cracks showed.

ChatGPT cannot check which internet providers are available at your specific address. It led with AT&T Fiber as my top pick, “if it’s available at your address." That little hedge carries the entire recommendation. AT&T Fiber reaches only about half to two-thirds of Lakewood, and coverage varies from street to street, sometimes house to house. So “if available" is the difference between the best plan in town and a dead end, and ChatGPT had no way to tell me which one I was looking at.
When I gave it my address and pushed for a straight answer, it was honest about the gap:
“I can’t definitively confirm service availability for a specific street address. Both AT&T and Spectrum require an address lookup in their own systems because availability can vary house by house, even between neighboring homes."
I respect that answer. It did not pretend. It told me to run my address through each provider’s own tool—or you can run it through compareinternet.com or call 1-877-447-1729 to speak with an internet specialist directly.
Basically what this response told me was that everything ChatGPT recommends after general advice is a guess.

Even when ChatGPT searches the web, and in my test it clearly did, its pricing is often out of date or mismatched. It handed me a nice little organized table with prices, speeds, and data that looked like the real deal, but the numbers did not hold up.
One plan, which runs about $80 to $85 a month right now, was quoted at $55. The $55 ChatGPT quoted is the price of the lower speed tier (an entirely different plan). So it did not miss by a few dollars or a stale promo. It used a lower tier price for a higher tier speed plan. If I had trusted that table, I would have walked in expecting to pay $55 for 500 Mbps, walked out paying $30 more, or downgraded to hit the price and lost the speed I thought I was buying.
None of the quoted numbers it provided flagged that there would be a post-promo rate jump in month 13. Cable promotions from Spectrum and Cox typically last twelve months, then the bill climbs by $20-$35 a month for the same plan. A plan that looks like a bargain in month one can quietly become one of your bigger monthly bills by month thirteen.
So, does ChatGPT know current internet prices? Not reliably. And it never says “I’m not sure." It states a figure that sounds precise, even if it is incorrect.

Then I asked the question a real shopper actually asks. Between Spectrum and Cox at my address, which is the better deal over 24 months once the promo ends? This is a major part of the plan decision, and ChatGPT cannot compare real competing plans on your street or model their true multi-year costs.
It produced a clean two-year cost table and named a winner. It also opened with three quiet words: “assuming both are available." It could not confirm that either provider actually serves the address, which is the same wall we hit earlier. The math was all incorrect as well because it sourced incorrect plan pricing to start with.
My advice if you want to use ChatGPT to help you compare? If you did your own research and then plugged it into ChatGPT and asked it to calculate the cost of each plan in 2 years and compare them, I think that would be a better strategy and far more accurate.
I am not here to tell you to close the tab on your favorite AI tool. Used for the right job, ChatGPT is a good teacher. Ask it to explain the difference between cable and fiber, what symmetrical speeds mean for your Zoom calls, how much speed a family of four needs, or what a data cap could cost you in a heavy-streaming month, and it will lay all of that out clearly and accurately.
In my test, its conceptual answers were the strongest part of the conversation. That is the smart way to use AI internet advice: as a tutor that gets you fluent in the questions, so you walk into the decision understanding what matters most to you. Speed you need, fiber versus cable, unlimited data versus a cap, the promo trap. Let it teach. Just do not let it be the one holding the calculator—because you are going to be led astray, my friend. Leave it to experts at compareinternet.com.
If you need help finding an internet plan that serves your family well, enter your zip code below to see the plans, prices, and providers available where you live. If you want to speak to a human directly, you can call our team of internet specialists at 1-877-447-1729.
61% of people overpay for their internet.
Are you one of them?
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[tel]Enter zip code
It can give general advice about speeds, fiber versus cable, data caps, and what to avoid, and it explains those concepts clearly. What it cannot do is confirm which providers reach your specific address or quote current pricing, so treat its recommendations as a helpful starting point and verify the real options before you sign up.
Not reliably. Even though it searched the web in our test, it quoted outdated and mismatched numbers. It also presented promotional rates as flat prices and skipped the post-promo increases. Because it states prices with confidence and no warning, it is risky to budget around anything it tells you without checking.
For learning the concepts, ChatGPT is great. For the actual decision, a comparison tool that checks your address wins every time, because address-level availability, today’s pricing, and true two-year cost are live, local facts.
[1] ATT.com “High-Speed Fiber Optic Internet Plans"
[2] CableTV.com “Cox Internet Plans, Packages, and Prices"
[3] CompareInternet.com “How Much Does Spectrum Internet Cost After One Year?"

About the author
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[tel]61% of people overpay for their internet.
Are you one of them?
Unlock exclusive offers in your area!
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