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“Comcast’s 250GB Usage Cap is Ruining My Family”

Phillip Dampier September 6, 2011 Broadband Speed, Comcast/Xfinity, Competition, Data Caps, Editorial & Site News 11 Comments

Too bad Comcast doesn't allow their Internet customers to use the service until 'xfinity.'

A Comcast customer of seven years has been warned if he exceeds the company’s arbitrary 250GB usage cap one more time, his family will be cut off from the cable company’s Internet service for one year.

Jrodefeld is just one more example of a customer who never thought he would have to monitor an online usage gauge to enjoy the Internet service he pays good money to receive.  But Comcast has deemed him an Internet abuser for exceeding a usage limit the company takes pains to bury in its lengthy terms and conditions, far away from glitzy marketing promising a fast, always-on experience.

In my house there are five people with five computers, several smartphones, a Playstation 3 and AppleTV all connected to the Internet through a wireless router.  Several of us are tech minded people who need to be able to send and receive large amounts of data through our network and publish material on the Internet.

Not only that, but I have (legally) downloaded films through places like iTunes and downloaded games and software in the same manner.  I create digital content (web pages, animation, other content) and publish it on the Internet. Not only that, but I send this content to friends and colleagues through web hosting sites like Netload.  I download games and watch streaming Netflix through my Playstation 3.

I think it is absolutely beyond belief that Comcast can offer the speeds that they do, with the evolving demands of the Internet and modern digital demands that people have, and think that 250GB is sufficient for even the moderately tech savvy user.  This data cap is absolutely horrible and is an insult to my family and an abomination given how much money we have given to Comcast over the last several years for their service, amounting in the thousands of dollars.  Not to mention that we signed up with the idea of getting an “always on”, unlimited service.

Jrodefeld claims his family steers clear of the usual suspect of heavy usage consumption — peer-to-peer software.  But with five tech-savvy teenagers and high-tech workers living under one roof, Comcast’s usage meter reflected the family was several times over the company’s usage limits:

  • In May, 2011 the total data used was:  1363GB
  • In June, 2011 the total data used was:  758GB
  • In July, 2011 the total data used was:  1271GB

Based on a review of the applications being run by those achieving that level of usage, online file backup is usually the culprit generating the most usage.  That is closely followed by avid online streaming and gaming.  While game-play itself is probably not much of a factor, the relentless number of game updates and new games distributed over an Internet connection can easily exceed several gigabytes each.  The family also streams some very high bitrate HD movies over a video rental service that uses their Comcast Internet connection to provide the video.  That can run nearly 10GB an hour in some cases, Jrodefeld says.

For usage cap opponents, this represents the perfect example of what can happen in families that rely on video streaming and have teenagers living at home.  While one individual may have little trouble staying within Comcast’s arbitrary 250GB limit, unchanged since its introduction in 2008, the more Internet-savvy members in a household sharing a connection, the bigger the risk for Internet Overcharging or a warning e-mail.

Comcast says their average user keeps usage well under 10GB per month.  But they don’t provide any demographic breakdown of usage profiles.  Older households may pay for an Internet account exclusively for web browsing and e-mail.  Younger households, those with teenagers, and cord-cutters who rely on Internet video streaming will almost certainly use considerably more.

Jrodefeld can’t believe Comcast has stuck his family with a “one size fits all” Internet experience.  And their reasons for the 250GB usage cap don’t make any sense.

“On the one hand, it is said that a user going over that threshold hurts the Internet experience for other users in your area, and on the other hand Comcast claims that the ‘average’ user uses only 2-4gb per month,” he notes. “If that is the case, then multiple users who average 250GB a month would slow down the Internet far more than one individual who uses, say, 500GB in a month.”

“If such a small number of users exceed the cap, Comcast’s network should easily be able to allow that without it affecting other users,” he argues. “If, on the other hand, many users are exceeding the cap, it means that the limit is far too small and Comcast should upgrade their infrastructure if they cannot keep up with user demands.”

The cap-free alternative for Comcast's "heavy users."

In fact, Comcast has upgraded the Internet experience for most of their customers considerably since they introduced a usage cap.  The company has aggressively deployed DOCSIS 3 upgrades, exponentially increasing the amount of bandwidth available in individual neighborhoods, allowing them to sell highly-profitable, faster tiers of service and eliminating congestion issues.  But no matter what speed you buy, or how much you spend, Comcast imposes the same 250GB usage limit on all residential accounts.

Comcast company officials had nothing to offer Jrodefeld, but several other Comcast customers did: upgrade to a Business Class account, if only to be rid of the usage limits.  Comcast Business Class service currently has no usage limitations, and carries this pricing in the northeast, before taxes and fees:

  • Starter Plan — 12/2Mbps:  $59.95/mo Best Value
  • Preferred Plan — 16/2Mbps:  $89.95/mo
  • Premium Plan — 22/5Mbps:  $99.95/mo Best Speed/Performance Value
  • Deluxe Plan — 50/10Mbps:  $189.95/mo
  • Installation Fee: 1 year contract = $199, 2 years = $99, 3 years = $49

The alternative is to sign with a telephone company provider, but AT&T also has a 250GB usage limit on their U-verse service, and charges an overlimit fee of $10 for every 50GB of excess usage.  Verizon FiOS offers unlimited service.

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jeff
jeff
12 years ago

I do hate caps but you have admit he was using a lot of bandwidth

Smith6612
Smith6612
12 years ago
Reply to  jeff

I’m sure I’ve used about the same or a little bit less on average if you look at his usage compared to mine spread across a1Mbps (before, 768kbps) DSL line and a 3Mbps line. Verizon and Frontier haven’t said a thing to me about my usage. He needs to go tell Comcast (and AT&T) to suck it up for being butthurt over usage. They are not mobile networks.

qwitcherwhining
qwitcherwhining
12 years ago
Reply to  Smith6612

Gimme an effing break. Anybody sniveling about being called for slurping up in excess of 1TB of bandwidth on average per month should be bitch-slapped. Anyone pulling down that kind of data consistently needs to get off their lazy, fat arses, and get a grip (not to mention a LIFE.) No wonder so many Americas are such fat, lazy slobs any more. Pry yourself off that raggedy Viewsonic monitor and breathe some real air, instead of that self-polluted, methane-laced, quasi-breathable air you create whilst locked in that room, playing COD, and eating 5 lbs of junkfood every day.

James R Curry
James R Curry
12 years ago

Obvious Troll is Obvious.

Kent
Kent
12 years ago

“qwitcherwhining” sounds like Comcast management, only much, much nicer.

I’m hoping one day Comcast’s brassless brass get a surprise birthday card from the Sherman Antitrust act before all their filthy stock options mature in the vats of lost customer souls they ferment them in.

On a positive note, they do keep many of the cold and callous off the streets by corralling them in their “customer service” centers 8 hours a day, so there’s that.

Bran
Bran
12 years ago

Pretty myopic there, qwitcherwhining. For a while, I was routinely hitting 750-1.1 TB by myself. I have a grandmother with Alzheimer’s that my grandfather refuses to put in a nursing home (till death do us part) and I watch live feeds from their house when he has to be away. A virtual nanny, I suppose. I also have to frequently transfer a number of raw images to a friend for his business overseas. Steam games can be many gigabytes, and they are frequently updated. Add streaming HDTV and Movies for occasional entertainment, well… After I explained about my grandmother to… Read more »

Scott
Scott
12 years ago

The difference in overall costs for bandwidth and maintenance from a Comcast customer pulling down 250GB to 1TB is only about $30-40 assuming all traffic is paid for and not via peered free sources, and that’s being rather generous due to their size and discounts. As long as they’re not on the Starter plan, Comcast would still be sitting pretty making good money. The only legitimate concern they may have is if they’ve been delaying or are unable to invest to expand their cable network in the families neighborhood to increase capacity if the actual sustained transfer during primetime hours… Read more »

Wayne
Wayne
12 years ago

Broadband Caps SUCK regardless of how much you use. Comcast is living in the dark ages. I recently switched to Verizon FIOS from Comcast because of the cap (even though I never exceeded the cap) and haven’t look back. I should have switched years ago.

Glen
Glen
12 years ago

Yeah been with comcast for almost a year and most of work is internet based skype nextflix, and hulu and magicjack xbox and ps3 live i use 2 to 3 tb of data a month got a call last week from a comcast tech saying i was over …..almost a year and your just now calling me told to the dude if im paying 99 a month for the 50mb connection im sure as hell gonna use it ….told the rep i know your just doing your job buyt you can suck a fat babys di*k and hung up on… Read more »

Ryan
Ryan
12 years ago

I’ve heard that it’s not only 250 gb, but you also have to be in a certain percentage of high bandwidth users. I purchased their 50/10 plan back in July 2009 ($99.95 per month) and immediately went way over and received the warning. Myself and my roommate share the connection, so it was fairly easy to exceed their limit by a lot – especially with that speed. A few months later we decided to drop down to their 22/5 plan and I don’t think we’ve gone over since — until this month. I just checked this morning and we were… Read more »

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