Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking So, in the scale of slow old-school speeds to the gigabit speeds of NBN 1000, where exactly does home wireless broadband fall on the speed spectrum? At the time of writing, Exetel was upgrading its home wireless broadband network around Australia, but its previous plans tapped out at 12Mbps download speeds. Things get a bit faster with iiNet, Internode and TPG all offering home wireless broadband speeds that are capped at a max download speed of 20Mbps via the Vodafone network. This happens to be the same max download speed and network that Felix Mobile uses, albeit for its solitary Felix $35 Subscription Prepaid plan. Spintel is the only other home wireless broadband provider that advertises max potential download speeds of 50Mbps, which is via the Optus 4G Plus network. The only other speed that’s mentioned for the home wireless broadband plans in our database is the 1.5Mbps speed cap for Vodafone plans if you go over your cap. Optus offers this, too, but that 1.5Mbps cap only kicks in after five automatic $10 payments that each include 40GB of max-speed data. The Optus 5G Internet Everyday plan costs $75 a month for download speeds up to 100Mbps and a minimum 50Mbps satisfaction guarantee, with 77Mbps typical evening download speeds. If you want to go faster, the Optus 5G Internet Entertainer costs $90 a month for max speeds that have the same 50Mbps minimum download speed guarantee but boasts 225Mbps typical evening download speeds. During the Telstra 5G home wireless broadband trial, it had a download speed range between 50Mbps and 600Mbps during the busy evening period with averages closer to 378Mbps. It remains to be seen what the speeds will be when Telstra finally release 5G home wireless broadband plans. Anecdotally, I hit 882Mbps download speeds on Telstra 5G recently during the middle of the day. As long as you have decent signal strength, 5G home wireless broadband seems like a viable NBN contender. While NBN plans can be as slow as 12Mbps (NBN 12), they also extend a few tiers beyond the 50Mbps that Spintel offers with its 4G-based home wireless broadband plan: namely, 100Mbps (NBN 100), 250Mbps (NBN 250) and 1000Mbps (NBN 1000). Where things get interesting is with 5G home wireless broadband plans, which can theoretically offer similar latencies to NBN and download speeds beyond the 100Mbps that’s the current fastest plans available to most homes in Australia. For comparison, below is a table that charts and ranks the different download and upload speeds available in Australia based on the main internet types that are (or have been) .