Estimate your monthly hosting bandwidth for 500,000 monthly visitors. Includes page views per session, average page size, and a safety redundancy multiplier.
Internet speed requirements have grown dramatically as streaming, video calls, and smart home devices have proliferated. Understanding what speed you actually need โ versus what ISPs sell โ helps you avoid overpaying for bandwidth you don't use or underpaying and experiencing constant buffering.
For a household of 4 with typical usage, 200โ500 Mbps provides comfortable headroom. Power users with 4K streaming on multiple screens, working from home, and gaming simultaneously may want 500 Mbpsโ1 Gbps. Note that WiFi congestion and interference often limit real-world performance more than your plan speed โ a wired connection typically delivers 80โ95% of plan speed, while WiFi may deliver 50โ70%.
Bandwidth is often used interchangeably with internet speed, but technically bandwidth is the maximum data capacity of a connection, while throughput is the actual data rate achieved. ISPs advertise bandwidth (the potential maximum), but real-world speeds are typically 70โ90% of the stated rate due to network congestion, overhead, and protocol inefficiencies. The key units: 1 Mbps = 1 megabit per second = 1,000,000 bits per second. Note that network speeds are measured in bits (lowercase 'b'), while file sizes are in bytes (uppercase 'B'). 1 byte = 8 bits โ a 100 Mbps connection downloads at about 12.5 MB/s (megabytes per second). A 1 GB file on a 100 Mbps connection takes approximately 1,000 MB ร 8 bits รท 100 Mbps = 80 seconds under ideal conditions.
Bandwidth requirements by activity (per device/stream): Standard definition video streaming (Netflix SD): 3 Mbps. HD streaming (1080p): 5โ8 Mbps. 4K Ultra HD streaming: 15โ25 Mbps. Video calls (Zoom, Teams) โ SD: 1.5 Mbps up/down; HD: 3.8 Mbps; 1080p: 8 Mbps. Online gaming: 3โ25 Mbps download, 1โ3 Mbps upload, but low latency (ping) matters more than speed. Smart home devices (each): 1โ5 Mbps. For households, add requirements for all simultaneous users. A family of 4 with two 4K streams, two video calls, and smart home devices needs roughly 60โ80 Mbps to avoid buffering. ISPs recommend 25 Mbps for basic use, 100 Mbps for most households, 300+ Mbps for heavy use or home offices.
Bandwidth determines how much data can flow; latency (ping) determines how quickly data travels. For real-time applications, low latency is more important than high bandwidth. Online gaming: under 30ms ping = excellent, 30โ50ms = good, 50โ100ms = acceptable, over 100ms = noticeable lag, over 150ms = poor experience. Video calls: under 100ms round-trip is ideal; over 300ms causes conversational awkwardness. Download speed doesn't affect gaming latency significantly โ a 10 Mbps connection with 20ms ping will game better than a 1 Gbps connection with 100ms ping. Fiber optic internet consistently offers the lowest latency (5โ15ms); cable is 15โ35ms; DSL is 25โ50ms; satellite (Starlink) is 20โ60ms, much improved from traditional satellites (500โ600ms).