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 That speed-test tool above makes it incredibly easy to test the download, upload and latency speeds for your TPG internet connection. You can actually use it with any type of internet, even if you’re not with TPG. Just interact with the ‘Start Speed Test’ button to see a download speed result after 10 seconds. Click or tap on ‘Show More Info’ to test upload—which, like download, will have a result in megabits-per-second (Mbps)—alongside latency, shown in milliseconds (ms). We advise you take the result of the download test and compare it to whatever your provider, TPG or otherwise, is self-reporting. If it’s noticeably slower, chat to your provider about what might be going on. They’ll probably want you to do some extra tests. So for the best internet speed test results, use a recent device and run the tests at a time when others in your home aren’t using the internet connection. On wireless, connect to the 5GHz network (if available) and get as close to the modem-router as possible. For more accurate wired results, connect a computer via Ethernet cable from router, modem-router or directly to the modem. Unlike download and upload speeds, the lower the number for latency, the better the result. TPG is one of the providers tracked by the ACCC as part of monthly and quarterly broadband performance data, and it scored a very respectable average latency of 10.1ms in Q4 of 2021. This ongoing ACCC report covers NBN data, specifically, and you can check out a breakdown of maximum achievable speeds on the different NBN speed tiers below:
NBN 12: 12Mbps download, 1Mbps upload NBN 25: 25Mbps download, 5 Mbps upload (or 10Mbps with Aussie Broadband) NBN 50: 50Mbps download, 20 Mbps upload NBN 75 (Aussie Broadband only): 75Mbps download, 20Mbps upload NBN 100/20: 100Mbps download, 20Mbps upload NBN 100/40 (Superloop, MyRepublic, Aussie Broadband, Pennytel, Exetel, Mate): 100Mbps download, 40Mbps upload NBN 250: 250Mbps download, 25 Mbps upload NBN 500 (Superloop, Vodafone, Exetel): 500Mbps download, 50Mbps upload NBN 1000: 990Mbps download, 50Mbps upload
It’s important to flag that the maximum achievable speeds can be different from a provider’s self-reported typical evening download speeds. Also note that only Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) homes and select Hybrid Fibre Coaxial (HFC) abodes are eligible to sign up for NBN 250 and NBN 1000 plans. Outside of NBN plans, TPG also offers non-NBN fibre (FTTB) as well as 4G home wireless broadband and 5G home internet plans. The table below outlines the speeds you can expect from all available TPG internet technologies: Check out a daily updating list of some of the most popular TPG internet plans from our comparison engine: