Last checked: June 16, 2026
Satellite can be an option where fixed broadband is limited, but the official map and provider result are only the start. Equipment and property conditions still matter.
What to check first
- Search the exact address in the official map or national checker.
- Compare fixed and mobile broadband layers if both matter.
- Check the technology type, not only the provider name.
- Save the result before signing a lease, buying, or switching service.
- Confirm installation and timing with the provider.
Official source path
Broadband availability is usually checked through regulator maps, national broadband programs, or provider-backed address tools. Use official maps first, then confirm with the provider before ordering service.
| Scope | Official source | Use it for |
|---|---|---|
| United States | FCC National Broadband Map | Reported fixed and mobile broadband availability by address. |
| United States | FCC Broadband Map Help Center | How to search, filter, and challenge map data. |
| United Kingdom | Ofcom Broadband Coverage Checker | Broadband coverage checks by postcode or address. |
| Canada | Government of Canada National Broadband Map | Canadian broadband availability map. |
| Australia | nbn Check Your Address | NBN address status and connection information. |
How to verify the record
- Start with the official source that matches the country, city, county, council, regulator, or agency for the record.
- Search with the most exact identifier available, such as the address, postcode, ZIP code, parcel number, business name, permit number, record number, or map location.
- Check the date, status, layer, score, category, or inspection result shown by the official system.
- Compare only sources that cover the same place and record type. A city record and a national map may answer different questions.
- Save the result and recheck if the decision depends on current status.
What can differ
- A map may show reported availability while the provider says installation is not currently possible.
- Apartment, unit, lot, rural route, and new-build addresses may not match the official dataset.
- Fixed broadband, mobile broadband, satellite, fiber, cable, DSL, and fixed wireless can use different layers.
- Country regulators use different speed thresholds and reporting rules.
What to record
| Item | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Exact address searched | Small address differences can change the result. |
| Technology type | Fiber, cable, DSL, satellite, mobile, and fixed wireless are not interchangeable. |
| Reported provider | The provider shown on a map may still need to confirm serviceability. |
| Date checked | Availability data can update after buildouts, challenges, or provider filings. |
Common mistakes
- Checking only a provider sales page without checking the regulator or national map.
- Using a nearby address and assuming the result applies to the exact unit or parcel.
- Treating advertised speed as a guaranteed speed at the property.
- Ignoring update dates or challenge/correction options when the map looks wrong.
FAQ
Is this guide the official result?
No. This page is a guide to official or public sources. The result that matters is the current record on the responsible agency, regulator, or local authority site.
Why can two sources disagree?
Broadband maps can use provider-reported data, update cycles, different address formats, and different definitions of serviceable locations.
What should I save after checking?
Save the source name, exact search term or address, result page link, date checked, and any record number shown by the official system.
When should I contact the agency directly?
Contact the agency or local office if the record is missing, outdated, unclear, or important for a purchase, lease, application, safety decision, insurance question, or professional work.
Editorial note
This guide explains how to find and read official or public records. It does not replace the current official database, a local agency response, or advice from a qualified professional where one is required.