Free Tool

Internet Speed Calculator: How Much Bandwidth Do You Need?

Not sure what internet speed your household needs? Answer a few questions about your usage and we will calculate the minimum and ideal bandwidth, then match you with the right satellite internet plan.

Your Household

2
12

What You Do

Select each activity your household uses, then choose the intensity level.

Select at least one activity above to see your speed recommendation.

Common Speed Requirements by Activity

Activity Light Use Moderate Use Heavy Use Latency Sensitive
Streaming Video 3 Mbps (SD) 10 Mbps (HD) 25 Mbps (4K) No
Video Calls / Zoom 1 Mbps (audio) 5 Mbps (HD video) 15 Mbps (group 4K) Yes - under 300ms
Online Gaming 5 Mbps (casual) 10 Mbps (competitive) 25 Mbps (streaming) Critical - under 100ms
Remote Work 3 Mbps (email/docs) 10 Mbps (cloud apps) 50 Mbps (RDP/files) Heavy use - under 200ms
Social Media / Browsing 1 Mbps 3 Mbps 5 Mbps No
Smart Home Devices 1 Mbps (few) 5 Mbps (10+) 20 Mbps (cameras) No

These speeds are per-activity minimums. Your total household requirement depends on how many activities run simultaneously. Use the calculator above for a personalized estimate that accounts for your specific household size and usage patterns.

Satellite Internet Speed Comparison

Starlink - 100 to 400 Mbps, 20-60ms latency

Starlink offers the fastest and lowest-latency satellite internet available. The Residential Lite plan delivers up to 100 Mbps for $80/mo, while the standard Residential plan offers up to 200 Mbps for $120/mo. Business customers can get up to 220 Mbps for $250/mo. With LEO latency of 20-60ms, Starlink is the only satellite provider suitable for gaming, video calls, and real-time applications.

HughesNet - 25 to 100 Mbps, 600-800ms latency

HughesNet provides speeds from 25 Mbps (Lite, $40/mo) to 100 Mbps (Elite, $65/mo and Fusion, $95/mo). As a GEO provider with satellites 36,000 km above Earth, latency is 600-800ms. This makes HughesNet unsuitable for gaming, video calls feel delayed, and cloud applications are noticeably sluggish. HughesNet works best for basic browsing, email, and SD streaming in areas where no other option exists.

Viasat - 50 to 150 Mbps, 500-700ms latency

Viasat offers the Essential plan at 50 Mbps for $70/mo and the Unleashed plan at 150 Mbps for $120/mo. Like HughesNet, Viasat is a GEO provider with 500-700ms latency. The higher speed tier makes Viasat better for streaming compared to HughesNet, but the high latency still rules out gaming and makes interactive applications feel unresponsive.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much internet speed do I need for streaming?
For standard definition (SD) streaming, 3 Mbps is sufficient. HD streaming (1080p) requires about 10 Mbps per stream. 4K Ultra HD streaming needs 25 Mbps per stream. If multiple people are streaming simultaneously, multiply accordingly - a household with 2 people streaming 4K needs at least 50 Mbps. Starlink Residential (200 Mbps) handles multiple 4K streams easily, while HughesNet Lite (25 Mbps) can only support a single HD stream.
What speed do I need for Zoom calls?
For audio-only Zoom calls, 1 Mbps is enough. HD video calls require about 5 Mbps. Group calls in high quality need 10-15 Mbps. However, speed is only part of the equation - latency matters too. Zoom recommends latency under 150ms for a smooth experience. GEO satellite providers like HughesNet and Viasat have 500-800ms latency, which causes noticeable delays and audio cutouts. LEO providers like Starlink (20-60ms latency) provide a much better video calling experience.
How much bandwidth does online gaming use?
Online gaming itself uses relatively little bandwidth - typically 5-10 Mbps for casual games and 10-25 Mbps for competitive or streaming gameplay. Game downloads and updates are the real data hogs (50-100 GB each). The critical factor for gaming is latency, not speed. Competitive online games require under 100ms latency for a playable experience. GEO satellite internet (HughesNet, Viasat) with 500-800ms latency is effectively unusable for real-time gaming. Starlink with 20-60ms latency is the only satellite option suitable for online gaming.
Do I need faster internet for more people?
Yes, but not in a simple linear way. More people means more simultaneous activities competing for bandwidth. A single person streaming 4K needs 25 Mbps, but a household of 4 where 2-3 people are online simultaneously does not need 4x that amount. A good rule of thumb: take your base speed needs, multiply by the number of simultaneous users with a 0.7x factor for 2 users or 0.5x for 3+, then add 20% headroom. For a family of 4 with typical usage (streaming, browsing, video calls), 100-150 Mbps is usually sufficient.
What satellite internet speed is good enough for working from home?
For basic remote work (email, documents, web browsing), 3-10 Mbps is sufficient. If you use cloud applications like Google Workspace or Microsoft 365, aim for 10-25 Mbps. For heavy remote work involving remote desktop (RDP), large file transfers, or software development, you need 50+ Mbps and latency under 200ms. Starlink Residential (200 Mbps, 20-60ms latency) is excellent for all remote work scenarios. HughesNet and Viasat can handle basic email and document work, but their high latency (500-800ms) makes cloud apps feel sluggish and remote desktop connections nearly unusable.