Internet coverage, speeds, the digital divide, affordability gaps, and what Miami-Dade's $45B connectivity push means for Miami Gardens residents
A data portrait of internet access types, adoption rates, and the gap between coverage and actual household use across Miami Gardens
Estimated share of Miami Gardens households with any active broadband subscription — below Florida's 90.2% state average, reflecting the city's lower median income and affordability challenges.
Only 36% of Miami-Dade households have access to top-quality fiber-based broadband — the gold standard for speed and reliability. The rest rely on cable, DSL, or mobile-only connections.
An estimated 18% of Miami Gardens households rely solely on smartphones for internet access — no fixed home broadband. Mobile-only connectivity limits remote work, homework, and telehealth capabilities.
Approximately 1 in 5 Miami Gardens households lacks adequate high-speed connectivity — either unsubscribed due to cost, relying on mobile-only access, or in areas without competitive ISP options.
An estimated 82% of Miami Gardens households have a desktop, laptop, or tablet — slightly below the Miami-Dade county average. Device ownership and broadband subscription rates closely track each other.
Per FCC data as of June 2024, approximately 94% of U.S. locations have at least one broadband provider available. Urban Miami Gardens has near-complete physical coverage — the gap is adoption, not availability.
Coverage vs. adoption, income-linked access gaps, and how Miami Gardens compares to Florida and national benchmarks
Miami-Dade County's own Digital Equity and Broadband Plan acknowledges the scale of the problem directly: only 36% of county households have access to top-quality, fiber-based broadband, and more than 455,000 households lack access to competitive pricing and ISP options. This is not a rural access problem — Miami Gardens is a fully urban city with physical infrastructure in place. The divide is driven by affordability, digital literacy, and competition — or the lack of it. In many Miami Gardens zip codes, residents have access to only one or two ISPs, meaning no competitive pricing pressure and no incentive to lower rates.
The major internet service providers available in Miami Gardens — their technology types, advertised speeds, and what residents can realistically expect
The dominant provider in Miami Gardens. Xfinity offers cable internet with plans ranging from 75 Mbps to 1.2 Gbps. Expanding fiber (Xfinity XFi) deployment in select areas. Most widely available ISP in the city.
AT&T Fiber is available in portions of Miami Gardens where fiber infrastructure has been deployed. Symmetrical upload/download speeds make it ideal for remote work and streaming. Not yet available in all areas.
T-Mobile's home internet product uses 5G and LTE towers to deliver broadband without cables. A no-contract, flat-rate option ($50/month) that has expanded availability significantly — especially valuable for households underserved by cable providers.
SpaceX's low-earth orbit satellite internet. Available throughout Miami Gardens as an option of last resort for underserved households. Latency is much lower than traditional satellite, but urban performance trails cable and fiber. Pricing at $120+/month.
With the federal ACP program discontinued in June 2024, Miami-Dade County is pursuing state and local funding alternatives. Lifeline ($9.25/month federal subsidy) remains active. Low-income residents should check with their ISP for income-based plans and the Miami-Dade Digital Equity initiative for access resources.
Miami-Dade Public Libraries — including branches serving Miami Gardens — provide free Wi-Fi and computer access during operating hours. City community centers and parks increasingly offer outdoor Wi-Fi hotspots under the county's digital equity expansion initiative.
How Miami Gardens and Miami-Dade compare to Florida averages and national benchmarks across key digital access indicators
| Digital Access Metric | Miami Gardens | Miami-Dade County | Florida State | U.S. National |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broadband Subscription Rate | ~78% | ~82% | 90.2% | 94% |
| Fiber Access (households) | ~36% | 36% | ~50% | ~55% |
| Computer / Device Ownership | ~82% | ~87% | 91.8% | ~92% |
| ISP Competition (2+ providers) | ~64% | ~64% | ~68% | 74% |
| Fixed Broadband (100/20 Mbps) | ~72% | ~74% | ~80% | ~81% |
| Public Access Points (libraries) | Yes — M-Dade system | 49 branches | State library network | Nationwide |
| Low-Income Subsidy Available | Lifeline ($9.25/mo) ✓ | County initiative ✓ | State BEAD program | Federal ACP ended 2024 |
| Federal Broadband Investment | M-Dade plan targets city | $45B targeted ✓ | $1.17B BEAD ✓ | $42.5B BEAD total |
Miami-Dade County's Broadband and Digital Equity Plan positions the region to receive a significant share of the $42.5 billion BEAD federal program, the $2.75 billion State Digital Equity Capacity Grants, and Florida's $1.17 billion state broadband allocation. The plan's four goals: reverse historic inequity through public-private strategy, foster competitive ISP marketplace options, build digital literacy and adoption programs, and coordinate funding across organizations. For Miami Gardens specifically — where the digital divide tracks closely with income — this funding wave represents a potential step-change in connectivity quality, affordability, and access for the city's most underserved households.
The most common assumption about internet access gaps in urban communities is that the problem is infrastructure — that ISPs haven't built the cables, towers, or fiber needed to reach underserved neighborhoods. In Miami Gardens, that assumption is largely wrong. The city is fully urban, densely populated, and physically covered by multiple broadband providers. The FCC's 2024 data shows approximately 94% of U.S. locations have at least one provider available — and Miami Gardens, as a dense urban city in one of the most connected metros in America, sits well within that covered zone.
The actual gap is an adoption gap, driven by two primary forces: affordability and competition. Miami Gardens' median household income of approximately $51,000 places a large share of residents in income brackets where broadband subscription rates fall to 56–72%. When a family is choosing between broadband and groceries, broadband loses. The discontinuation of the federal Affordable Connectivity Program in June 2024 — which provided up to $30/month to qualifying households — removed a critical subsidy just as digital access was becoming more central to employment, education, and healthcare. The county estimates more than 455,000 Miami-Dade households lack access to competitive pricing, meaning they have one realistic ISP option priced above what many can afford.
The solution being pursued through Miami-Dade's Digital Equity Plan and the incoming federal BEAD funding is multi-pronged: expand fiber infrastructure to increase competition and reduce prices, fund digital literacy programs for residents who have internet but don't use it effectively, and build sustainable low-income access pathways now that the federal ACP is gone. For Miami Gardens residents, the next 3–5 years represent a genuine inflection point in connectivity — one that could meaningfully close the gap between the city's 78% adoption rate and Florida's 90.2% average.
The World Bank estimates that a 10% increase in broadband access can lead to a 1.2% increase in GDP per capita in developed countries. That macro figure translates directly to the household level: broadband is not a luxury — it is infrastructure that determines whether residents can access remote work, telehealth, online education, e-commerce, and government services. In a city where 65.1% of residents own their homes and are building equity, the value of high-speed broadband is compounded — home values in areas with strong broadband access consistently outperform those without.
The education dimension is particularly acute. Miami Gardens' two universities — Florida Memorial University and St. Thomas University — and the M-DCPS school system increasingly deliver coursework, homework, and administrative communication digitally. Students in households without reliable broadband face a measurable academic disadvantage: the "homework gap" identified by Pew Research consistently shows that lower-income students without home internet score worse, complete fewer assignments, and have lower graduation rates. Every Miami Gardens household that moves from mobile-only or no-internet status to fixed broadband is a household whose children gain a significant academic advantage — compounding over years of schooling into measurably better outcomes.
Remote work is the third dimension. The post-2020 normalization of remote and hybrid work means that Miami Gardens residents with fast, reliable home broadband can compete for positions at any employer in South Florida, the U.S., or globally — without the cost and time of commuting. The same infrastructure that enables a student to complete homework enables a parent to work from home for a company paying $90,000 rather than commuting to a job paying $45,000. Broadband is economic mobility infrastructure, and closing Miami Gardens' adoption gap is among the highest-return investments the city and county can make.
ISPs, community centers, libraries, and digital literacy programs — explore the full directory
Browse the Directory →Access comprehensive research, statistics, and interactive tools on crime, economy, education, transportation, and more
View Data Hub