Internet Providers in Taiwan
Taiwan has excellent internet infrastructure, with fiber optic coverage in virtually all urban areas and most suburban neighborhoods. Here are the major providers:
| Provider | Plans Available | Speed Range | Monthly Cost | Contract Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chunghwa Telecom (中華電信) | Fiber (HiNet) | 100M - 2G | NT$599-1,899 | 2 years |
| Taiwan Mobile (台灣大哥大) | Fiber | 100M - 1G | NT$499-999 | 2 years |
| FarEasTone (遠傳電信) | Fiber | 100M - 1G | NT$499-999 | 2 years |
| TFN Media (凱擘/台固) | Cable + Fiber | 60M - 1G | NT$399-899 | 1-2 years |
| Community broadband (社區網路) | Shared fiber | 100M - 500M | NT$300-600 | Monthly or yearly |
| Asia Pacific Telecom (亞太電信) | Fiber (limited areas) | 100M - 300M | NT$399-699 | 2 years |
Provider breakdown
Chunghwa Telecom (HiNet) — the dominant provider
- Market share: Over 60% of home internet connections
- Coverage: Best coverage nationwide, including rural areas
- Reliability: Most stable connection, lowest downtime
- Customer service: Largest service network, technicians available quickly
- Downsides: Most expensive, less flexible contracts
- Best for: Anyone who wants reliability above all else, remote workers who can't afford downtime
Taiwan Mobile — best value for speed
- Competitive pricing, often running promotions
- Good coverage in urban areas
- Bundle discounts available with mobile phone plans
- Customer service available in English at flagship stores
FarEasTone — solid alternative
- Similar pricing and speeds to Taiwan Mobile
- Good bundle deals with mobile plans
- Strong coverage in major cities
- English support at larger branches
TFN Media / Cable providers — budget option
- Uses existing cable TV infrastructure (coaxial cable) for internet, plus fiber in some areas
- Cheaper than telco fiber plans
- Speeds may be less consistent, especially during peak hours
- Upload speeds significantly lower than download speeds on cable plans
- Good for basic use, not recommended for heavy upload needs (remote work video calls, streaming)
Community broadband — cheapest option
- Many apartment buildings, especially newer ones, have a building-wide internet connection shared among residents
- Usually arranged by the building management committee
- Very affordable: NT$300-600/month
- Speeds and quality vary dramatically — some buildings have excellent connections, others are painfully slow during peak hours
- No individual contract — you pay through management fees
- Ask your landlord or building manager if this option is available
Fiber vs Cable vs Mobile Hotspot
| Feature | Fiber Optic | Cable (Coaxial) | Mobile Hotspot (4G/5G) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Download speed | 100M - 2Gbps | 60M - 1Gbps | 30M - 300Mbps (varies) |
| Upload speed | Symmetric (same as download) | 10-50Mbps (asymmetric) | 10-50Mbps |
| Latency | 1-5ms | 5-15ms | 20-80ms |
| Reliability | Excellent | Good | Weather/location dependent |
| Best for | Remote work, gaming, streaming | General browsing, streaming | Temporary solution, travel |
| Installation | Required (1-2 weeks) | Required (1 week) | None — plug in and go |
| Contract | Usually 2 years | 1-2 years | Monthly (with mobile plan) |
| Cost | NT$599-1,899/month | NT$399-899/month | Included with unlimited data plan |
When to use a mobile hotspot instead
A mobile hotspot from your phone or a dedicated pocket Wi-Fi device can work as a temporary or supplementary internet solution:
- Just arrived: Use your phone's hotspot while waiting for home internet installation
- Short stay (less than 3 months): May not be worth signing a fiber contract
- Frequent movers: Avoid contract termination fees
- Backup connection: Keep your mobile data as a failover if your home internet goes down during an important call
Most unlimited mobile data plans in Taiwan (NT$499-999/month for 4G/5G) allow hotspot tethering. However, speeds are throttled during peak hours and are not as consistent as a wired connection. Not recommended as your primary internet if you work from home.
How to Apply as a Foreigner
Documents needed
| Document | Required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ARC | Yes | Original — the primary ID document |
| Passport | Sometimes | As secondary verification |
| Proof of address | Yes | Rental contract or utility bill showing the installation address |
| Taiwan bank account or credit card | Yes | For automatic monthly payment |
| Taiwan phone number | Yes | For account registration and service notifications |
| Chop (印章) | Sometimes | Some providers require a personal chop; others accept signatures |
Application process
Option 1: Apply in person (recommended for foreigners)
- Visit a telecom store — go to a flagship store (直營門市) in a city center rather than a small dealer. Flagship stores are more experienced with foreign customers.
- Bring all documents listed above
- Choose your plan — the staff will explain available options. Ask about current promotions.
- Sign the contract — contracts are in Chinese. Ask the staff to explain key terms, or bring a Chinese-speaking friend.
- Schedule installation — typically 3-7 business days after signing. Chunghwa Telecom is usually fastest. Some rural areas may take 2 weeks.
- Be home for installation — a technician will come to install the modem/router and run any necessary cabling. Installation takes 1-3 hours depending on your building's wiring situation.
Option 2: Apply online
Most providers have online application forms, but they're typically in Chinese and may not accept ARC numbers in the ID field. If you want to try:
- Chunghwa Telecom: cht.com.tw — most complete online application
- Taiwan Mobile: taiwanmobile.com
- FarEasTone: fetnet.net
Option 3: Call customer service
- Chunghwa Telecom: 0800-080-128 (some English support available)
- Taiwan Mobile: 0809-000-852
- FarEasTone: 0800-058-885
Installation day
What to expect:
- The technician will arrive during a scheduled time window (usually a 2-hour window, e.g., 9:00-11:00 AM)
- They'll check your building's wiring and install or connect the modem (數據機) and sometimes a router (路由器)
- For fiber connections, they may need to run a fiber cable from the building's distribution box to your apartment
- In newer buildings, fiber is often already wired to each unit — installation is faster
- The technician will test the connection speed before leaving
- Tip: Ask the technician for the modem's Wi-Fi password and admin settings. The default passwords are often weak.
After installation
- Test your speed immediately at speedtest.net or by searching "speed test" in Google
- Change the default Wi-Fi password — the default is usually printed on the modem and is not secure
- Consider buying your own router if you need better Wi-Fi coverage or features (the provided modem/router combo is basic)
- Set up your bank account auto-debit for monthly payments to avoid late fees
Recommended Plans by Usage
Light use (browsing, email, social media)
| Provider | Plan | Speed | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Community broadband | Shared | 100-300M | NT$300-600 |
| TFN Media | Cable 60M | 60M/10M | NT$399 |
| Chunghwa Telecom | Fiber 100M | 100M/40M | NT$599 |
Best pick: Community broadband if available, otherwise Chunghwa 100M for reliability.
Remote work (video calls, cloud apps, file sharing)
| Provider | Plan | Speed | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chunghwa Telecom | Fiber 300M | 300M/100M | NT$899 |
| Taiwan Mobile | Fiber 300M | 300M/100M | NT$699 (promo) |
| FarEasTone | Fiber 300M | 300M/100M | NT$699 (promo) |
Best pick: Chunghwa 300M for maximum reliability, or Taiwan Mobile/FarEasTone 300M if price matters more. The 300Mbps tier provides comfortable headroom for simultaneous Zoom calls, file uploads, and general browsing.
Why upload speed matters for remote work: Video calls use 2-5Mbps upload. Screen sharing adds another 1-3Mbps. If you're uploading large files to cloud storage while on a call, you need even more. A plan with at least 100Mbps upload ensures smooth performance even with multiple activities running.
Gaming and streaming (4K video, online gaming, large downloads)
| Provider | Plan | Speed | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chunghwa Telecom | Fiber 500M | 500M/250M | NT$1,099 |
| Chunghwa Telecom | Fiber 1G | 1G/600M | NT$1,399 |
| Taiwan Mobile | Fiber 1G | 1G/500M | NT$999 (promo) |
Best pick: The 500M plan is more than enough for 4K streaming and online gaming. The 1Gbps plan is only necessary if you have many devices or frequently download very large files. For gaming, low latency matters more than raw speed — fiber from any major provider delivers excellent latency (1-5ms to Taiwan servers).
Speed Test Results
Typical real-world speeds you can expect in Taiwan (based on Speedtest Global Index data and user reports):
| Plan Speed (Advertised) | Typical Download | Typical Upload | Latency |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100M fiber | 85-98 Mbps | 35-45 Mbps | 2-5ms |
| 300M fiber | 270-295 Mbps | 90-100 Mbps | 2-5ms |
| 500M fiber | 450-490 Mbps | 220-250 Mbps | 1-3ms |
| 1G fiber | 850-950 Mbps | 500-600 Mbps | 1-3ms |
| 60M cable | 50-58 Mbps | 8-10 Mbps | 5-15ms |
| Community broadband | 30-200 Mbps (varies) | 10-100 Mbps | 3-20ms |
Taiwan's internet is fast by global standards. The country ranks in the top 15 worldwide for average broadband speed. Fiber connections in particular deliver near-advertised speeds consistently.
Speed by city
| City | Average Download | Average Upload | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taipei | 150-300 Mbps | 80-150 Mbps | Best infrastructure, most plan options |
| New Taipei | 120-250 Mbps | 70-130 Mbps | Varies by district; newer areas are faster |
| Taichung | 100-200 Mbps | 60-100 Mbps | Good coverage in urban core |
| Kaohsiung | 100-200 Mbps | 60-100 Mbps | Solid infrastructure, good value |
| Hsinchu | 120-250 Mbps | 70-130 Mbps | Good speeds due to tech industry demand |
| Rural areas | 30-100 Mbps | 15-50 Mbps | Fiber may not be available; ADSL or 4G alternatives |
Note: These averages reflect typical residential connections, not the fastest available plan. Your actual speed depends on your specific plan, provider, building wiring, and router quality.
Tips for Saving Money
Bundle with your mobile plan
All three major telcos (Chunghwa, Taiwan Mobile, FarEasTone) offer bundle discounts when you combine home internet with a mobile phone plan:
- Typical savings: NT$100-300/month off the internet plan
- Some bundles include free speed upgrades (e.g., pay for 300M, get 500M)
- Ask about current bundle promotions when signing up
Negotiate
- Ask about promotions: Telecom companies always have ongoing promotions. Ask "What's the best deal available right now?" The listed price is often not the best price.
- Mention competitors: "Taiwan Mobile offered me 300M for NT$699 — can you match that?" works at Chunghwa and vice versa.
- Renewal discounts: When your 2-year contract is about to expire, call to cancel. They'll often offer a renewal discount or speed upgrade to keep you.
- Seasonal deals: Back-to-school (August-September) and Lunar New Year periods often have special promotions.
Use community broadband
If your building offers community broadband at NT$300-600/month, try it first. For basic browsing, social media, and standard-definition streaming, it may be perfectly adequate. You can always upgrade to a dedicated fiber connection later if the speed isn't sufficient.
Avoid unnecessary upgrades
- 100M is enough for a single person doing normal browsing, streaming (1080p), and occasional video calls
- 300M is the sweet spot for remote workers and households with 2-3 people
- 500M-1G is overkill for most users — you're paying for speed you'll rarely use to its full potential
- Don't pay for 1Gbps unless you have 5+ devices streaming simultaneously or transfer very large files regularly
Equipment tips
- Use the provided router unless you have specific needs — it's free and usually adequate
- If you buy your own router, make sure it supports your plan speed (a Wi-Fi 5 router may bottleneck a 1Gbps plan)
- Place your router centrally in your apartment for best coverage
- For larger apartments (30+ ping), consider a mesh Wi-Fi system (NT$3,000-8,000) for complete coverage
Common Questions About Home Internet in Taiwan
Can I get home internet without an ARC? Very difficult. All major providers require an ARC or Taiwan national ID for contract registration. Alternatives for those without an ARC:
- Ask your landlord: Some landlords include internet in the rent or can sign up under their name
- Community broadband: Paid through building management fees — no individual contract needed
- Mobile hotspot: Use your phone's unlimited data plan as a temporary solution
- Prepaid mobile router: Available from some providers, though speeds are limited
How long is the typical contract? Most fiber plans require a 2-year contract. Early termination fees are proportional to the remaining contract period — typically NT$3,000-8,000 depending on the plan and how many months remain. Some cable providers offer 1-year contracts at a slightly higher monthly rate. Month-to-month plans exist but are rare and significantly more expensive.
What speed do I need for remote work? For standard remote work (video calls, email, cloud documents, screen sharing), 100Mbps is the minimum comfortable speed and 300Mbps is recommended. Here's a breakdown:
| Activity | Download Needed | Upload Needed |
|---|---|---|
| Zoom/Google Meet (1080p) | 3.8 Mbps | 3.8 Mbps |
| Screen sharing | 1-3 Mbps | 1-3 Mbps |
| Cloud file sync (Dropbox, Google Drive) | 5-20 Mbps | 5-20 Mbps |
| Slack/Teams messaging | < 1 Mbps | < 1 Mbps |
| Web browsing | 5-10 Mbps | < 1 Mbps |
| Simultaneous activities | 25-50 Mbps | 15-30 Mbps |
A 300Mbps plan gives you 10x headroom above these needs, ensuring smooth performance even during peak usage.
Can I transfer my contract if I move? Yes. Contact your provider to request an address transfer (移機). The process:
- Fee: NT$500-1,000 (some providers waive this during promotions)
- Timeline: 3-7 business days for new installation at the new address
- Your contract terms remain the same
- The provider will disconnect the old address and set up the new one
- Important: Check that your new address is in the provider's coverage area before moving
What if the internet is slow? Troubleshooting steps:
- Restart your modem and router — unplug for 30 seconds, then reconnect
- Test with a wired connection — plug your laptop directly into the modem via Ethernet to rule out Wi-Fi issues
- Run a speed test at speedtest.net — compare results with your plan speed
- Check for interference — microwave ovens, Bluetooth devices, and neighboring Wi-Fi networks can interfere with your signal
- Call your provider — if wired speeds are significantly below your plan, the provider should investigate. Chunghwa Telecom's technical support: 0800-080-128
Is a VPN necessary in Taiwan? Taiwan has no internet censorship — all websites (Google, Facebook, YouTube, Netflix, etc.) are accessible without a VPN. However, you might want a VPN for:
- Accessing content libraries from your home country (e.g., US Netflix, BBC iPlayer)
- Privacy when using public Wi-Fi
- Connecting to your company's network for remote work
- Taiwan's internet is fast enough that VPN speeds remain comfortable
Related Articles
- How to Open a Bank Account in Taiwan — needed for automatic bill payment
- ARC Application Guide — required for signing an internet contract
- Cost of Living in Taiwan — internet costs in the context of overall expenses
- How to Find an Apartment in Taiwan — check internet options before signing a lease