Fiber Backhaul Systems

Commercial Fiber Internet

Corporate-grade connectivity built on pure glass-core optical paths. Perfect for multi-gigabit workloads, cloud systems, hosted VoIP, and mission-critical uptime.

What is Commercial Fiber Internet?

Commercial fiber internet is business-grade broadband delivered over fiber-optic cabling. Unlike residential internet, which relies on copper phone wires, coaxial cables, or heavily shared local fiber nodes, commercial fiber is engineered to support symmetrical download and upload bandwidth, static IP pools, dedicated optical paths, and legally binding Service Level Agreements (SLAs) with carrier repair guarantees.

Key Operational Benefits of Commercial Fiber

Symmetrical Bandwidth PerformanceResidential lines restrict your upload speed to a fraction of your download rate. Commercial fiber delivers identical speeds in both directions (e.g. 500 Mbps down AND 500 Mbps up). This is a technical requirement for seamless cloud document syncing, remote servers, and HD multi-party video conferencing.
Lower Ping Latency & JitterLight travels through fiber at near-limitless speed, producing ultra-low latency (typically under 5-10ms). Low latency keeps hosted VoIP lines crystal-clear and prevents packet drops across site-to-site VPN tunnels.
Static IP InfrastructureSupports the allocation of static public IPv4 blocks. Your IT managers can map secure gateways, host internal database software, run on-premises mail servers, or safely restrict remote network logins by origin IP.

Typical Speeds & Spend

300M Symmetrical SOHO Fiber

Best for professional offices, clinics, or restaurants with 1-15 users. Highly affordable.

Est. $85 - $125 / month
500M - 1G Symmetrical Corporate Fiber

Best for SaaS companies, medical facilities, and active office workspaces with 20-100 staff.

Est. $150 - $250 / month
Enterprise Dedicated Internet (DIA)

1:1 unshared bandwidth port with 99.999% uptime guarantees, 4-hour repair, and dedicated support.

Est. $350 - $1,500 / month

Commercial Fiber Procurement Checklist

  • Check if your building is already "On-Net" with your desired carrier.
  • Inquire about the maximum symmetrical upload capacity.
  • Ask if the installation includes a site engineering survey.
  • Verify if a static IP pool block is available for lease.
  • Confirm contract terms (typically 12, 24, or 36 months).
  • Analyze construction fees if optical fiber has to be bored from public streets.