Internet Plan ₱/Mbps
₱/Mbps is the supermarket math for fiber. Cuts through marketing speed claims by factoring in real-world delivery %, installation fee, and lock-in length.
Your usage
Plans to compare
Side by side
| Plan | Rank | Effective speed | ₱ / mo (amortized) | ₱ / Mbps | ₱ / GB | Total contract |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLDT Fibr 200 | #3 | 170 Mbps | ₱1,999 | ₱11.76 | ₱5.00 | ₱47,976 |
| Globe Fiber 300 | #2 | 240 Mbps | ₱2,499 | ₱10.41 | ₱6.25 | ₱59,976 |
| Converge FiberX 500 | #1 | 425 Mbps | ₱2,500 | ₱5.88 | ₱6.25 | ₱60,000 |
Tool reviewed 2026-06-14
How it works
Effective Mbps = advertised × delivery %. Most PH fiber realistically delivers 70–90% during peak. Run a Speedtest at 8–10 PM for a few nights to know yours.
Amortized monthly cost = monthly fee + installation ÷ contract months. Spreading the one-time setup over the lock-in makes plans truly comparable.
₱/Mbps (effective) = amortized monthly ÷ effective Mbps. Lower wins. ₱/GB = amortized monthly ÷ household GB/month — useful if you're a heavy data user.
Pure browser-side math. Defaults are typical 2026 PH fiber promos; replace with the exact monthly fee from each ISP's current quote.
Frequently asked questions
What does '₱ per Mbps' actually tell me?
It's the unit price of internet speed: monthly fee divided by speed delivered. Lower = better value. A ₱2,000/200 Mbps plan that delivers 80% = ₱12.50/Mbps. A ₱2,500/500 Mbps plan delivering 85% = ₱5.88/Mbps — the second is much better value despite costing more monthly. It's the same logic as ₱/kg at the supermarket.
Why do you ask for 'actual delivery %'?
Advertised speed is the marketing maximum. Real-world delivery depends on infrastructure, peak-hour congestion, your equipment, and how far you live from the ISP node. Most PH fiber subscribers see 70–90% of advertised during peak hours, dropping further on shared DSL or wireless. Use Speedtest.net during evening peak (8–10 PM) for a few days to get your number.
How much data does my household actually use?
Rough benchmarks (per person, per month): 30–50 GB pure browsing/messaging; +20–50 GB social media scrolling; +40 GB YouTube at 1080p (1 hr/day); +250 GB Netflix at 4K (1 hr/day); +30 GB online gaming. A family of 4 with mixed usage typically lands at 300–800 GB/mo. Check your router admin panel or your ISP's usage portal for an exact figure.
Should I always pick the lowest ₱/Mbps?
Not always. If your household only uses 100 GB/mo, paying ₱2,500/mo for 500 Mbps is overkill — you'll never saturate it. The right plan matches your actual usage pattern. Light users (browsing, video calls): prioritize uptime and customer service over raw speed. Heavy households (4K streaming, multiple gamers, work-from-home): prioritize ₱/Mbps and upload speeds.
Why include the installation fee?
Some ISPs waive it on promo, others charge ₱2,500–₱5,000 upfront. Spread over a 24-month lock-in, that's ₱100–₱200 extra per month — enough to flip which plan is cheapest. The amortized monthly cost reflects the real total ownership cost. If you're certain you'll stay past 24 months, divide by your actual expected tenure instead.
Lock-in vs no-lock-in plans?
Locked-in plans (typically 24 months) are usually ₱200–500/mo cheaper than no-contract plans. If you're settled in your address and the ISP serves it reliably, lock-in saves you money. Watch for early termination fees if you might move: PLDT/Globe charge prorated lock-in penalties (~₱5,000–10,000 if you leave early).
Why aren't 5G mobile plans here?
5G home (PLDT Home WiFi, Globe at Home Prepaid Wifi) is hard to compare apples-to-apples — coverage, signal quality, and data caps vary wildly per address. If you're on 5G, log your real Speedtest result during peak hours and use that as your 'actual delivery' Mbps figure manually.
Does this save or transmit my data?
No. Everything runs in your browser. We don't store, log, or transmit your plan list or usage figures.
Sources & references
From official issuer, regulator, and data-provider sites. Verify any figure against the primary source before acting on it.