Good Internet Speed for a Business in 2025 — Small and Medium Guide
Business internet requirements scale with employee count and operations type. Test your current business connection at instantspeedtest.net/ and compare to these benchmarks.
Business Internet Requirements — By Size and Type
| Business Type | Employees | Download | Upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solo/home office | 1 | 100 Mbps | 20 Mbps |
| Small office (basic) | 2–5 | 300 Mbps | 50 Mbps |
| Small office (video-heavy) | 2–5 | 500 Mbps | 100 Mbps |
| Medium office | 10–25 | 1 Gbps | 500 Mbps |
| Retail with POS + security | 1–5 | 100 Mbps | 25 Mbps |
| Restaurant (POS + WiFi for guests) | 1–10 | 200 Mbps | 50 Mbps |
| Creative agency / video production | 5–10 | 1 Gbps symmetric | 1 Gbps |
Business vs Residential Internet — Why the Distinction Matters
Business internet plans cost more but provide: SLA (Service Level Agreement) guaranteeing uptime and minimum speeds with compensation for outages; static IP addresses (essential for running servers, VPNs, and remote access); priority support with faster resolution times; and often symmetric speeds (equal upload and download) via fiber. For any business where internet downtime costs money — retail POS, remote service businesses, video production — the business plan’s SLA is worth the premium. Consumer plans have no guaranteed uptime. The FTC-required 80% of advertised speed 80% of the time is the only consumer protection — business SLAs typically guarantee 99.9% uptime with 4-hour response times. See our guide on fiber vs cable internet.
Related Guides
- Fiber vs Cable Internet
- Good Speed for Home Office
- Good Upload Speed
- Cloud Video Editing Speed
- Speed for Zoom Webinars
- Speed for Video Conferencing
Frequently Asked Questions
How much internet speed does a restaurant need?
A typical restaurant needs: 10–25 Mbps for POS system and order tablets; 25–50 Mbps for guest WiFi (capped at 10–15 Mbps per device); and 10–25 Mbps for security cameras. Total: 50–100 Mbps minimum, 200 Mbps recommended for comfortable headroom. Keep the POS system on a separate network from guest WiFi using VLAN or guest network to prevent bandwidth competition and maintain PCI compliance security isolation.
Is residential internet okay for a small home-based business?
For freelancers and solo businesses doing video calls, cloud work, and email: residential internet with 100+ Mbps and 20+ Mbps upload is adequate. The limitations are: no SLA (acceptable for most solopreneurs); no static IP (workable with dynamic DNS services); and ISPs may prohibit running servers on residential plans (terms of service vary). For businesses requiring genuine uptime guarantees, static IPs, or higher upload than residential plans provide, a business fiber plan is the appropriate choice.