By Natthawut (Ton) Khamnuadi • June 2026 • Business Account Executive at Metronet, Wichita Falls, TX

I talk to business owners across Wichita Falls every week. When I bring up fiber internet, at least half of them say the same thing: "I checked a while back. It is not available at my location." And most of the time, they are wrong. Not because they did anything wrong, but because the last time they checked was six months or a year or two years ago. Fiber networks do not get built all at once. They get built street by street, neighborhood by neighborhood, and the map changes constantly.

I have spent over a decade working in telecommunications. I started as a Tier 3 Network Technician at T-Mobile, where I handled advanced infrastructure support for cellular towers, LAN/WAN systems, DNS, DHCP, fiber optic lines, and coaxial networks. Later I managed a Spectrum retail store here in Wichita Falls on Kemp Blvd. I have seen the internet infrastructure in this city from every angle. And what I can tell you is that fiber coverage in Wichita Falls today looks nothing like it did even 18 months ago.

This article is not a sales pitch. It is a straightforward explanation of where things stand with fiber in our city, how to actually find out if your building has access, and what to expect if you decide to make the switch.

Why Your Last Check Might Be Outdated

Fiber buildout does not happen the way most people picture it. It is not like flipping a switch for the whole city. Construction crews work through specific zones. They run fiber down one street, then the next street, then the next block. One side of a road might have fiber access while the other side does not get it for another three months. Your neighbor at the strip mall down the road might already be on fiber while your building is still showing "not available" on a coverage map.

Here is the part that trips people up: provider coverage maps on websites are almost always behind reality. The maps get updated periodically, sometimes every few months, sometimes less frequently than that. So a map that says your address is not serviceable might be pulling from data that is 3 to 6 months old. Meanwhile, a construction crew finished pulling fiber past your building two weeks ago.

I see this constantly. A business owner tells me fiber is not available. I run their address through our internal serviceability tools, and it comes back as active. The fiber is literally sitting at the curb, ready to be connected. They just did not know because the public-facing map had not caught up yet.

The FCC's National Broadband Map, which a lot of people reference, has its own lag. It is based on data that providers report, and the reporting cycle does not always match the actual construction timeline. According to the FCC's own documentation, there can be a 6 to 12 month gap between when a provider builds out an area and when it appears on the national map. That is a long time to go without knowing you have a better option.

How Fiber Buildout Actually Works

If you have ever seen construction crews with orange conduit and spools of cable working along a road in Wichita Falls, you have seen fiber buildout in action. The process follows a general pattern, and understanding it helps explain why coverage can be spotty block to block.

Step 1: Backbone and trunk lines

Providers first run high-capacity fiber lines along major routes. Think of these as the highways of the network. In Wichita Falls, major corridors like Kemp Blvd, Southwest Parkway, Kell Blvd, and Jacksboro Highway tend to get built out first because they serve the most addresses per mile of fiber laid.

Step 2: Distribution and lateral lines

From those trunk lines, smaller distribution cables branch off into specific neighborhoods and commercial areas. This is where the street-by-street rollout happens. A crew might spend two or three weeks building out a specific zone, then move on to the next one.

Step 3: The last mile to your building

Once distribution fiber reaches your street, the final connection to your individual building is called the "last mile" drop. For a business, this means running a fiber line from the nearest splice point to your building's exterior, then bringing it inside to where the equipment will be installed. This last step usually only happens after you sign up for service.

The reason this matters is that your building can be in a fiber-ready zone without the provider knowing you want it. The fiber is there, sitting in the ground or on a pole outside your building. But until you request service, nobody runs the final connection. From the outside, nothing looks different. You would never know by looking.

The Only Reliable Way to Check Your Address

I know this sounds simple, but the most accurate way to find out if fiber is available at your business is to call someone and give them your exact address. Not your zip code. Not your neighborhood. Your actual street address.

Here is why that specificity matters. Fiber serviceability databases work at the address level, not the zip code level. I have seen two businesses in the same shopping center where one is serviceable and the other is not, because the fiber lateral reached Suite A but had not been extended to Suite D yet. If you type in your zip code or just your street name on a provider's website, you might get a generic result that does not apply to your specific unit.

When I check an address for a business owner, I am pulling from real-time serviceability data. That data tells me whether fiber is already at the curb, whether it is in the construction pipeline, and if so, what the estimated completion date is. None of that information is available on public coverage maps.

My recommendation: do not rely on online tools alone. Call a provider directly. Give them your exact street address and suite number. Ask them to run a serviceability check. It takes about 30 seconds. That is a more reliable answer than anything you will find on a website.

What Fiber Installation Actually Looks Like for a Business

Once you confirm that fiber is available and decide to move forward, here is what happens. I am going to walk through this step by step because a lot of business owners have concerns about disruption, and most of those concerns are based on what they have heard rather than what actually happens.

Timeline: 1 to 2 weeks, start to finish

From the day you sign a service agreement to the day your fiber internet is active, you are typically looking at 1 to 2 weeks. Some installs happen faster if the fiber infrastructure is already at your building. The actual on-site installation where a technician is working in your building usually takes 2 to 4 hours.

The equipment: what is an ONT?

The main piece of equipment that gets installed is called an ONT, which stands for Optical Network Terminal. It is a small box, roughly the size of a paperback book, that mounts on an interior wall. The ONT is where the fiber optic cable from outside connects and converts the light signal into an ethernet signal that your router, switch, or firewall can use. It draws very little power, makes no noise, and has a few indicator lights on the front. That is it. No giant rack of equipment unless your business specifically needs one.

How the fiber gets to your building

This is where I get the most questions. Business owners picture crews tearing up their parking lot with trenchers. In the vast majority of installs, that does not happen. Here is why.

Most commercial areas in Wichita Falls already have underground conduit from previous telecom or utility buildouts. Fiber can be pulled through that existing conduit without any digging at all. When there is no existing conduit, crews use a technique called micro-trenching. That means cutting a narrow slit in the ground, about 1 to 2 inches wide, laying the fiber cable in it, and sealing it up. It is nothing like traditional trenching. You will barely notice the line in the pavement afterward.

In some cases, fiber comes in aerially, meaning it runs along existing utility poles and drops down to your building. This is common in older parts of Wichita Falls where aerial utility lines are already in place. An aerial install creates zero ground disturbance.

Inside the building

The technician will bring the fiber cable from the building's exterior to the spot where the ONT will be mounted. They will run the fiber through an existing cable pathway if one exists, or drill a small hole through an exterior wall. The hole is typically about the diameter of a pencil. The ONT gets mounted, the fiber gets terminated and tested, and the technician plugs an ethernet cable from the ONT into your network equipment. At that point, you are live.

I have been through hundreds of these installs from the technical side. When I was doing Tier 3 support at T-Mobile, I worked with fiber optic infrastructure directly, including termination and testing. The process is clean, fast, and low-impact when done by a competent technician.

Common Concerns, Answered Honestly

Will they tear up my parking lot?

Almost certainly not. In more than 90% of business installs I have been involved with, the fiber reaches the building through existing conduit, aerial drops, or micro-trenching. Full-scale trenching across a parking lot is extremely rare and would only happen if there is absolutely no other path to your building. If that situation comes up, you would know about it well before any work starts. No reputable provider is going to show up and start cutting into your asphalt without talking to you first.

Will there be downtime during the switch?

If you are switching from another provider, here is what I recommend: keep your old service active until the fiber install is complete and tested. Do not cancel your existing internet until the new fiber connection is confirmed working. Most providers will schedule your install and have the fiber running side-by-side with your current service. Once you confirm everything works, then you call your old provider and cancel. If you time it right, your actual downtime is about five minutes while the technician moves the ethernet cable from your old equipment to the ONT.

Do I have to sign a long-term contract?

This depends entirely on the provider and the plan. Some business fiber plans are month-to-month. Others require 12, 24, or 36-month commitments. In general, longer contracts tend to come with lower monthly pricing and reduced or waived installation costs. A 36-month contract might save you $30 to $50 per month compared to month-to-month pricing on the same speed tier. That adds up to $1,080 to $1,800 over three years.

My advice: if you are confident you are staying at your location for the next few years, a longer contract usually makes financial sense. If your lease is up in 18 months and you are not sure what you are doing, look for a month-to-month option or a contract that matches your lease term. Always ask about early termination fees before you sign. Get that number in writing.

What happens to my old internet service?

Nothing happens to it automatically. Your old provider will not cancel your service just because you signed up with a new one. You need to call them and cancel once your fiber is up and running. Before you cancel, check whether you are in a contract with your current provider. If you are, ask about any remaining balance or early termination fee. Some providers charge a prorated amount based on the remaining months. Others charge a flat fee.

Also, if you have a phone number tied to your old internet service, make sure to port that number before you cancel. Once you cancel and the line goes dead, porting a number becomes much more difficult and sometimes impossible. Handle the port first, then cancel.

Is fiber really that much better than what I have now?

That depends on what you have now. If you are on a cable internet connection, you are likely getting asymmetric speeds. A plan advertised as 200 Mbps download might only give you 10 to 20 Mbps upload. Fiber typically provides symmetrical speeds. A 500 Mbps fiber connection gives you 500 Mbps down and 500 Mbps up. For any business using cloud software, VoIP phones, video conferencing, or backing up data to the cloud, that upload speed difference alone is significant.

Latency is the other big difference. Cable internet typically has latency between 15 and 35 milliseconds. Fiber latency is usually between 1 and 5 milliseconds. If you are on VoIP calls all day, you will notice the difference. Calls are clearer, there is less delay, and you get fewer dropped calls. If you use a VPN to connect to a corporate network, lower latency means faster response times for every click, every file load, every application you open.

Then there is the reliability factor. Fiber optic cables are glass, not copper. They are not affected by electromagnetic interference, they do not degrade in extreme heat the way copper does, and they do not suffer from the signal loss over distance that you get with coaxial cable. In a city like Wichita Falls where summer temperatures regularly hit 100 degrees and above, that heat resistance is a practical advantage, not a marketing talking point.

What Real Fiber Speeds Mean for Your Business

Let me put some numbers on this so it is not abstract.

A 5-person office uploading a 500 MB file to a shared cloud drive on a cable connection with 10 Mbps upload would wait about 6 minutes and 40 seconds. On a 500 Mbps fiber upload, that same file transfers in roughly 8 seconds. That is not a typo. Eight seconds instead of almost seven minutes.

A medical office pulling up imaging files that are 50 to 200 MB each will notice immediate improvement in load times. On a cable connection with 100 Mbps download, a 200 MB image takes about 16 seconds. On a 1 Gbps fiber connection, it takes about 1.6 seconds. Over the course of a full patient day with dozens of images, those seconds add up to real time savings.

For restaurants and retail, the speed itself is less important than the consistency. A credit card transaction needs very little bandwidth, maybe 20 to 30 kilobits per second. But it needs that bandwidth to be available instantly with no packet loss. Fiber delivers that kind of consistency because you are not sharing a cable node with 50 other subscribers in the same neighborhood. Your connection is dedicated glass from your building to the provider's network.

A Note About DSL and Fixed Wireless

Some businesses in Wichita Falls are still on DSL connections. DSL runs over old copper phone lines and maxes out at about 25 to 100 Mbps download in the best conditions, with upload speeds that rarely exceed 5 to 10 Mbps. Performance drops the farther your building is from the provider's central office. If you are more than 10,000 feet from the CO, you are probably getting significantly less than the advertised maximum.

Fixed wireless is another option that some businesses use, especially in areas where wired infrastructure has not reached. It works, and for a long time it was the only option for certain parts of town. But fixed wireless is affected by weather, line-of-sight obstructions, and congestion during peak hours. Typical speeds are 25 to 100 Mbps download with latency between 20 and 50 milliseconds. That is fine for basic use, but it is not in the same category as fiber for reliability or speed.

The point is not that DSL or fixed wireless are bad. They served a purpose, and in some cases they are still the only option. But if fiber has become available at your address since you last checked, and you are still on one of those older technologies, you are leaving a lot of performance on the table. The monthly cost difference between DSL and fiber is often smaller than people expect. In some cases, fiber plans at 500 Mbps cost the same as or less than a DSL plan that delivers a fraction of that speed.

How to Prepare for a Fiber Install

If you find out fiber is available and decide to go for it, here are a few things you can do to make the process smooth.

Know where your current equipment is

Before the install, figure out where your existing router, modem, switch, and any patch panels are located. The technician will need to know where to place the ONT so it can connect to your existing network. If your current equipment is in a locked server closet or utility room, make sure someone with a key will be on-site during the install.

Tell your staff what is happening

Let your employees know that a technician will be on-site and that there might be a brief period where the internet switches over. If you plan the transition for a slower time of day, like early morning or after the lunch rush, you can minimize any impact on operations.

Have your network credentials ready

If you use a managed router or firewall with a specific configuration, have the login credentials available. The technician can work with your IT person or your managed service provider to make sure the new connection integrates with your existing setup. If you do not have an IT person, that is fine. A standard business install with a provider-supplied router does not require any special configuration on your end.

Keep your old service active

I said this earlier and I am saying it again because it is that important. Do not cancel your current internet before the fiber install is complete and confirmed working. Run both connections in parallel for at least a day or two. This gives you a fallback if anything unexpected comes up during the install, and it means zero downtime for your business.

Check Your Address. It Takes 30 Seconds.

If you have not checked your address for fiber availability in the last six months, it is worth checking again. I can look it up for you in about 30 seconds. No commitment, no follow-up calls you did not ask for. Just a straight answer on whether fiber is available at your building right now.

If it is available, I will walk you through what speeds and plans make sense for your specific business. If it is not available yet, I can usually tell you whether your area is in the construction pipeline and give you a rough timeframe.

I can check your address in 30 seconds. Reach out and I will let you know what is available.

Check My Address for Fiber