Fullnet Communications is a regional fiber-optic and fixed wireless internet provider serving Oklahoma City and surrounding areas, competing directly against larger national carriers by offering symmetrical upload and download speeds on fiber routes and lower-latency fixed wireless in coverage gaps.
Fullnet operates as a competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) with its own fiber backbone running through parts of Oklahoma City's metro area. Unlike cable providers that share bandwidth across neighborhoods, Fullnet's fiber-to-the-home service delivers dedicated capacity, meaning speeds don't degrade during peak evening hours. The company also deploys fixed wireless access (FWA) in areas where fiber buildout hasn't reached, using licensed spectrum to serve customers without running new cable. This dual-technology approach positions Fullnet as a viable alternative to Cox (the dominant cable provider in Oklahoma City) and AT&T for broadband, though Fullnet's footprint remains limited compared to those carriers.
Fullnet's fiber tiers start at 300 Mbps down/300 Mbps up at approximately $79 per month and scale to 1 gigabit symmetrical service around $139 per month. These prices apply to new customers on contract terms; promotional rates and bundling availability vary by service address and require a direct quote. Fixed wireless packages typically run $69 to $99 per month for download speeds between 50 and 200 Mbps, with upload speeds 5 to 15 Mbps lower than download due to the nature of wireless technology. Installation fees (usually $99 to $199) and equipment fees (typically $10 to $15 per month for a modem and router combo) apply at signup. Verify current pricing and availability by entering your address on their website, as promotional rates and service areas change quarterly.
Cox Communications dominates Oklahoma City with cable broadband in nearly every neighborhood, offering speeds up to 940 Mbps for around $129 per month but charging $180 or more for gigabit tier service and bundling incentives that expire after 12 months. AT&T Fiber reaches select areas in and around Oklahoma City, delivering symmetrical gigabit service at competitive prices ($80 to $99 monthly) but covering far fewer addresses than Cox. Fullnet's fiber matches AT&T's symmetrical speeds and undercuts Cox's pricing in overlapping service areas; however, Fullnet's fixed wireless tiers (capped at 200 Mbps) fall well below what fiber can deliver, making it suitable only for users in coverage zones without hardline options. Choose Fullnet fiber over Cox if you value upload speed consistency and avoid long-term contracts; choose Cox if price after introductory rates matters and you're already accustomed to cable. AT&T Fiber is preferable if available at your address, as it covers more Oklahoma City neighborhoods than Fullnet and often negotiates better bundle rates with AT&T TV or wireless service.
Fullnet fiber works well for remote workers and small offices in Oklahoma City that require reliable upload capacity for video conferencing, cloud backups, or file transfers. Symmetrical speeds prevent the bottleneck that cable users experience when sending large files. Gamers and streaming households in fiber-served areas benefit from low latency and no bandwidth throttling during peak hours. Fullnet's fixed wireless serves rural and underserved pockets of the Oklahoma City metro where cable and fiber have not been deployed, though it is not suitable for heavy streaming, large downloads, or latency-sensitive online gaming. Fixed wireless performance degrades in heavy rain and dense tree cover. Users locked into AT&T Fiber service or those seeking the lowest introductory price regardless of long-term rates should look elsewhere.
Fullnet offers online ordering and scheduling through its website for both fiber and fixed wireless services. Fiber installations require a technician visit (typically 1 to 2 hours) to run cable into the home, mount the modem and router, and test speeds. Fixed wireless setup is faster, usually completed in under an hour, with equipment mounted on a windowsill or exterior wall to optimize signal. A technician will confirm signal strength and alignment on-site. Both service types include a standard modem and Wi-Fi 6 router in the monthly equipment fee; Fullnet does not charge separate activation fees in most cases.
Fullnet's customer service operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Central Time, with limited Saturday hours. The company dispatches technicians seven days a week for installations. Service is available in central Oklahoma City neighborhoods and scattered suburbs; coverage maps on the Fullnet website show exact address eligibility. Verify service availability before signing up, as fiber and fixed wireless footprints do not overlap all areas.
Fullnet fills a real gap in Oklahoma City's broadband market by offering symmetrical fiber speeds without the pricing lock-in and upload constraints that cable imposes, and it serves neighborhoods Cox and AT&T skip entirely through fixed wireless.
