AI Home Internet Planner

Quick answer: Enter household size, devices, and activities. Receive a clear recommendation for download speed, upload speed, and technology type that fits your usage and budget.

The AI Home Internet Planner is a practical guide for Canadian households that want reliable internet without overpaying. It translates your day to day habits into a target speed range and suggests a suitable technology type such as fibre, cable, fixed wireless, DSL, or satellite. Results focus on real world performance, including factors such as latency, evening slowdowns, and Wi-Fi bottlenecks within the home.

AI Home Internet Planner

Tell us a few things in plain language. We’ll estimate the internet speed you need and explain why — clearly and simply.

How many people use the internet at home, and how many devices are usually connected?

3
We size your speed to the number of people sharing the connection.
10
A rough count is enough — we just need the ballpark.

When you watch videos, what quality is most common, and do you play games online?

What kind of home do you have, and how strong is your Wi-Fi around the house?

2200
Smart devices talk constantly in the background — they do add up.

Who should use this planner

  • Families that stream in 4K, game online, and work from home
  • Small households that want to stop overbuying speed
  • Rural users choosing between fixed wireless and satellite
  • Anyone unsure whether fibre, cable, DSL, fixed wireless, or satellite is the best fit

How the planner estimates your needs

  1. Collect inputs. People in the home, number of devices, smart cameras, work or school needs, gaming, and streaming habits.
  2. Score activities. Each activity has a typical bandwidth and latency profile. For example, 4K streaming is throughput heavy, competitive gaming is latency sensitive.
  3. Apply concurrency. The tool estimates how many activities happen at the same time in the evening peak.
  4. Add headroom. A 20 to 30 percent buffer is added to handle spikes, software updates, and video calls.
  5. Recommend a tier. The result maps to common Canadian speed tiers with a preferred technology type.

Recommended speed ranges by household pattern

Household patternDownloadUploadNotes
1 to 2 people, email, web, HD streaming50 to 100 Mbps10 to 20 MbpsBasic smart home and one 1080p stream
3 to 4 people, 4K streaming or casual gaming150 to 300 Mbps20 to 50 MbpsTwo to three concurrent streams in the evening
Work from home with video meetings150 to 500 Mbps30 to 100 MbpsUpload matters for screen sharing and backups
Creators, frequent uploads, cloud backups300 to 1000 Mbps100 to 500 MbpsPrefer fibre when available
Rural with fixed wireless or satellite25 to 100 Mbps5 to 20 MbpsData caps and latency require careful plan choice

Technology fit guide

  • Fibre to the home. Best for consistency, symmetrical uploads, low latency.
  • Cable. Widely available, strong download speeds, uploads vary by area.
  • DSL or Copper. Adequate for light use if newer options are not available.
  • Fixed wireless. Good rural option if signal quality is strong and the tower is not congested.
  • Satellite. Coverage almost everywhere, higher latency, consider data policies.

Tips to make any plan feel faster

  • Place the router in an open central location away from metal and microwaves
  • Use Ethernet for gaming PCs, workstations, and smart TVs where possible
  • Upgrade to Wi-Fi 6 or Wi-Fi 6E for crowded homes with many devices
  • Split smart cameras onto a guest network to reduce interference with calls and streaming
  • Enable Quality of Service to prioritize video calls and gaming

FAQs for the AI Home Internet Planner

How much speed is enough for 4K streaming

Allow at least 25 Mbps per 4K stream with a 30 percent buffer. Two concurrent 4K streams plus regular browsing typically need 150 Mbps or more.

Do I need symmetrical speeds

Symmetrical uploads help if you join many video meetings, upload large files, or back up photos to the cloud. Fibre is ideal for this use case.

Will a faster plan fix poor Wi-Fi

Not always. Weak Wi-Fi can make a fast plan feel slow. Improve router placement, add mesh nodes, or use Ethernet for key devices.

Is ping time important

Yes. Latency affects gaming, video calls, and remote desktop. Fibre and cable usually have lower latency than satellite.