Google’s GFiber Labs programme is pushing home-internet speeds far beyond today’s multi-gigabit offers. The company broke the long-standing 10 Gb/s limit in October 2023 when it unveiled a 20 Gb/s symmetrical service powered by Nokia’s energy-efficient 25 G PON technology.
Early-access customers in Kansas City, North Carolina’s Triangle, Arizona and Iowa began receiving installations at the end of 2023, paying $250 a month for the service and a pre-certified Wi-Fi 7 router that can share multi-gig speeds around the home.
To make 20 Gb/s widely available, Google spent 2024 upgrading its entire fibre footprint to 25 G PON, promising coverage “in every GFiber city” by the end of the year. In July 2024 the company went a step further: engineers demonstrated a 50 Gb/s connection on a production fibre hut in Kansas City, proving that the same infrastructure can scale towards the 100 Gb/s goal the project ultimately targets.
GFiber’s faster tiers build on earlier launches. A 5 Gb/s symmetrical plan reached four US cities in February 2023, laying the commercial groundwork for today’s multi-gig offers. By May 2023, Google was already testing 20 Gb/s links with universities and enterprise partners and inviting new testers.
The public announcement followed that October, and network construction has accelerated ever since. Early 2025 saw the service expand to Las Vegas together with simplified 1 / 3 / 8 Gb/s “lifestyle” plans for other markets, underlining Google’s confidence that multigig is becoming the new normal.
GFiber argues that rising device counts, cloud gaming, immersive video, VR and forthcoming AI and quantum applications will demand ever-higher bandwidth. Its strategy is therefore to keep the physical network ahead of demand and pair it with next-generation Wi-Fi so that customers can actually use the capacity they buy.
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