So you've heard the rumors. A neighbor mentioned it. Maybe you spotted a Ting truck. Maybe you typed your address into our checker, hit enter, and got the digital equivalent of "soon, friend."
You're in good company. Asking "can I get fiber Internet at my house?" is one of those questions that feels simple but isn't, because the answer depends on infrastructure, timing, and a whole bunch of stuff happening underground that you can't see.
Fiber doesn't just appear. It's physical infrastructure: real cables, real crews, real permits, real construction. When you check fiber Internet availability at your address and the answer is "not yet," it's not because someone forgot you. It's because the network is still being built toward you.
Other ISPs have spent decades training us to expect either instant gratification or a vague brush-off. We're not going to do either. If Ting fiber isn't at your address yet, we'd rather tell you the truth and give you something useful to do with that information.
Internet availability is hyperlocal. Like, weirdly hyperlocal. Your block might be lit up while the street behind you isn't. The apartment two floors above you might have fiber while yours is still waiting on a wiring upgrade. New construction down the road might get connected before homes that have been there for fifty years.
A few things that affect when fiber reaches your specific address:
If you've heard Ting is coming to your area, the single most useful thing you can do is let us know you want it. Joining the interest list at your address does two things: it puts you in line for updates so you'll know the moment service is live, and it signals demand in your area.
That second part matters more than people realize. Build prioritization isn't random. When a street, a block, or a neighborhood lights up with interest, that information goes into the decision-making.
So yes, sign up. And then — this is the part most people skip — mention it to your neighbors. The faster a neighborhood collectively signals "we want this," the faster things tend to move. You don't need to door-knock. A text in the group chat works.
Ting is a local-first operation. The team in your market is the team building your network, and they tend to share updates in the places people actually live online: local Facebook groups, neighborhood Nextdoor threads, community newsletters, and town meetings. Following your local Ting accounts or signing up for market-specific emails is the easiest way to hear "we're lighting up your street next month" without having to refresh anything.
If you're moving into a new place and considering setting up Internet, and you've heard Ting is coming, think twice before locking yourself into a long contract with another provider. Some ISPs will happily sign you up for two years of price-locked service, and "locked" can cut both ways. Month-to-month or short-term options give you the flexibility to switch when fiber arrives.
If you're already with another provider, check your contract end date. Mark it on your calendar. Set a reminder. Future you will thank present you.
Look, you still need Internet. Life doesn't pause for infrastructure. A few real options:
None of these are forever solutions. They're get-you-through solutions. That's the right mindset.
Quick technical detour, because it's fair to ask why you should hold out at all.
Fiber Internet uses thin strands of glass to send data as pulses of light. Cable Internet uses the same coaxial wire that brought TV into homes in the 80s. Both work. They are not the same.
A few practical differences that actually show up in daily life:
It's also worth saying: Ting's fiber isn't "fiber-powered" or "fiber-to-the-node" or any of the other phrases ISPs use to make hybrid networks sound like fiber. It's fiber from our network all the way to your wall. There's a difference.
Head to ting.com and enter your address in the availability checker. You'll get one of three answers: yes (great, sign up), coming soon (great, join the list), or not yet (still helpful — join the list so we can let you know when that changes).
This happens more than you'd think. Sometimes a street is mid-build, with some homes connected and others still waiting on the final stretch. Sometimes it's a permitting or wiring issue specific to your property. The interest list is the best way to get notified the moment your specific address is ready.
It genuinely can. We use demand signals to help prioritize where we build next. It's not a magic button, but blocks and neighborhoods with strong interest get noticed.
It depends. New construction in an area we're already building can be fast. Brand new market expansion is slower because there's permitting, planning, and physical construction involved. We don't promise specific timelines because we don't want to break them — but local updates from your market's Ting team are the most accurate source.
Yes. Ting Mobile is available in lots of places where Ting fiber isn't yet. If you're a Ting Mobile customer when fiber arrives at your address, that's not a bad position to be in.
Absolutely. Renters can sign up just like homeowners. If you live in an apartment building, multi-unit property, or townhome community, the wiring inside the building sometimes affects how quickly we can serve specific units. Joining the interest list helps either way.
At Ting, you get one fair price for fast, reliable fiber, with no contracts, no data caps, and no surprise fees. Whether that's more or less than what you're paying now depends on what you're paying now (and what's hidden in your current bill that you may have stopped noticing). Most people who switch find the math works in their favor.