- US households pay monthly fees while platforms still impose significant network infrastructure charges
- Broadband cost recovery does not reflect actual traffic or usage patterns
- Large users in the electricity and airline sectors pay in proportion to demand
In the United States, broadband networks operate under a cost model that does not match actual usage: households generate substantial revenue for major Internet platforms while also contributing to the Universal Service Fund, which supports rural connectivity, schools, libraries, and health care facilities.
A typical American household that has high-speed Internet access contributes about $9 per month to this fund, but the largest traffic generators impose substantial infrastructure charges without commensurate contributions.
New analysis from Strand Consult has shown how this creates a structural mismatch in which consumers fund network maintenance and expansion, while platforms enjoying the highest traffic volumes contribute little to last-mile investments or affordability mechanisms.
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Major broadband benefactors pay just a fraction
Infrastructure systems typically charge large users in proportion to the demand they place on networks – because industrial electricity consumers, airlines, and high-volume transaction networks all pay usage-based fees that reflect the costs they impose.
Hyperscale data centers routinely sign long-term agreements, fund interconnection upgrades, and pay demand fees that protect residential ratepayers.
Strand Consult observes that the White House’s ratepayer protection pledge reinforces this principle, calling on the largest users of energy infrastructure to bear the costs they generate.
However, broadband remains an exception, with the main traffic generators often paying nothing at the network interconnection point, despite significant capacity consumption.
A model in South Korea shows how usage-based cost recovery can coexist with high-performing broadband markets, as large domestic and global platforms pay network operators for the infrastructure used by their services, allowing operators to recover costs while maintaining competitive prices.
In the Caribbean, global platforms generate revenue from local users without paying for the networks they rely on.
Strand Consult calls this “digital colonialism” and notes that small markets face particular challenges because infrastructure costs cannot be spread across large populations.
These examples suggest that broadband could adopt proportional contribution mechanisms similar to other sectors.
Broadband is competitive and prices have generally fallen, even as demand and traffic from streaming, ad tech and AI services increase.
Providers invest tens of billions each year in upgrades such as fiber optic, DOCSIS 4.0, 5G and satellite networks, but high-traffic platforms including sports and streaming services add pressure to networks without paying for additional infrastructure.
Reforming the Universal Service Fund or introducing traffic-based pricing could ensure that the biggest users contribute fairly.
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