Comparing your options for internet in Quincy, Washington? Here's a straightforward look at what's available, how they compare, and what to look for.
Check Fiber Availability at My Address →Quincy WA internet provider options have improved in recent years. Residents typically have access to some combination of fiber, fixed wireless, and legacy cable or DSL depending on their exact address. Here's what you'll generally find:
Here's how the main options in the area compare as of early 2026. We've focused on providers with transparent public pricing.
| Provider | Type | 100 Mbps | Gig Plan | Install Fee | Contract | Signup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crescent Bar Internet Local | Fiber (PUD) | $45/mo | $70/mo | $0 | None | Online ✓ |
| LocalTel Now Ziply Formerly iFIBER / Saddle Mountain | Fiber | $60.45/mo$58.45 + $2 fee | $87.45/mo$83.45 + $4 fiber fee | Varies | Yes | Online |
| Starlink Satellite | Satellite | — | ~$120/mo | $599 hardware | No | Online |
Prices from provider websites as of March 2026. Always confirm current rates directly. LocalTel fees are stated separately on their website.
💡 The short version: On a Gig plan, Crescent Bar Internet is the lowest-priced fiber option in Grant County at $70/mo — no install fee, no contract, and no surprise fees at billing. LocalTel's Gig plan costs $87.45/mo once their mandatory fiber access fee is added. Switching saves you over $200 in the first year vs LocalTel, including setup.
T-Mobile Home Internet and Verizon Home Internet have expanded into rural markets and can be around $50–$70/month with no install fee or contract. For some households they work fine — but there are tradeoffs worth knowing.
Fixed cellular plans share tower capacity with mobile users. During peak hours or when towers are congested, speeds can drop significantly. Latency on cellular is also higher than fiber, which matters for video calls, gaming, and remote work. And in a valley like Crescent Bar or in parts of rural Grant County, signal strength can be limited.
Fiber — especially a dedicated connection on the Grant County PUD network — doesn't share a wireless tower. You get consistent speeds regardless of what your neighbors are doing. If cellular is your only realistic option, it's a reasonable choice. But where fiber is available, it's the better long-term answer.
Starlink is a solid option for homes in very remote areas where no fiber or fixed wireless is available. It works almost anywhere with a clear view of the sky and has improved significantly since launch. But it comes with real costs: hardware runs around $599 upfront, monthly service is about $120/mo, and latency — while better than older satellites — is still higher than fiber.
In Grant County, most addresses in or near Quincy and Crescent Bar have access to fiber through the PUD network. If your address qualifies, fiber at $70/mo with no hardware cost and no install fee is a more practical choice than satellite at $120/mo with a $599 equipment purchase.
When something goes wrong with your internet, you want to reach someone who knows your neighborhood — not a national call center. As a Quincy-based ISP, we're accountable to the same community we live in. Call or text 509-906-1250 and you'll reach us directly.
We also don't lock you into annual contracts. Internet providers in Quincy WA that require long-term commitments are common — we're not one of them. Sign up month-to-month and leave anytime.
Enter your address on our homepage to see if fiber internet is available where you live.
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