February 23, 2026
GFiber Home 3 Gig: The perfect fit when everyone's online at once
Picture this: It's prime time at your house. You're on a critical video call, someone else is streaming the season finale, and a kid is deep into an online game while background music plays. Sound familiar? We designed GFiber Home 3 Gig for these busy households—it's the power you need to keep everyone running smoothly, all at the same time.
What is GFiber’s Home 3 Gig?
Home 3 Gig is built for households where multiple people depend on the internet simultaneously. It delivers symmetrical 3000 Mbps speeds for just $100 a month. Best of all, you get free professional installation, unlimited data, no long-term contracts, and no hidden fees. We like to call it our "Goldilocks" product—it's truly just right.
What's included in Home 3 Gig?
Home 3 Gig comes with our custom-engineered Wi-Fi 7 router included. This powerhouse device covers up to 5,000 square feet and comes with up to two mesh extenders to eliminate dead zones. Here's why Wi-Fi 7 matters: Older routers rely on a single frequency band, but Wi-Fi 7 operates on three. Think of it as upgrading from a single-lane road to a multi-lane, high-speed highway for your data. This means better consistency and less interference for every device connected in your house.
What our customers say
Our customers often tell us that once they switch, they simply stop thinking about their internet—which is exactly the point. Whether it's being named "Best Fiber Internet" by Forbes or "Best Overall" by HighSpeedInternet.com multiple years running, the consensus is clear: when your internet just works, your entire home runs better.
Is Home 3 Gig right for my home?
If your current connection struggles to keep up with your household internet needs, then Home 3 Gig was built with you in mind— fast enough for everyone, reliable enough to count on, and priced to deliver great value.
**Actual internet, Wi-Fi speeds, and Wi-Fi coverage are not guaranteed and can vary based on factors such as home or business size and layout, construction materials, hardware and software limitations, latency, packet loss, etc.
