Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking Read on for how to run a Telstra speed test, what speeds you should expect from Telstra NBN plans, what the results mean, and how Telstra fares against the competition. Usually, there’d be a disclaimer here about speed differences between the day and the typically busy evening period, but Telstra offers download speeds that should match the max potential of your speed tier (except for Telstra’s NBN 1000 plan, which still clocks in at an impressive 700Mbps). For a Telstra NBN speed test, expect the download speed to be faster than the upload speed, while latency refers to how quickly data is sent and received from your device. Download and upload speeds should have higher numbers before the ‘Mbps’ measurement, while lower numbers are best for latency (measured in milliseconds, or ‘ms’). The lower the latency, the more responsive real-time online activities are, including online gaming and videoconferencing. Below is an indication of the max download and upload speeds to look out for from NBN speed tests (remembering that Telstra doesn’t offer NBN 12); the main speed tiers are bold:  

NBN 12: 12Mbps download, 1Mbps uploadNBN 25: 25Mbps download, 5 Mbps uploadNBN 50: 50Mbps download, 20 Mbps uploadNBN 75 (Aussie Broadband only): 75Mbps download, 20Mbps uploadNBN 100/20: 100Mbps download, 20Mbps uploadNBN 100/40 (Superloop, MyRepublic, Aussie Broadband, Pennytel, Exetel, Mate): 100Mbps download, 40Mbps uploadNBN 250: 250Mbps download, 25 Mbps uploadNBN 500 (Superloop, Vodafone, Exetel): 500Mbps download, 50Mbps uploadNBN 1000: 1000Mbps download, 50Mbps upload

Here’s what download speeds you can expect from all of Telstra’s NBN plans:

Telstra NBN 25: 25Mbps download Telstra NBN 50: 50Mbps download Telstra NBN 100: 100Mbps download Telstra NBN 250: 250Mbps download Telstra NBN 1000: 700Mbps download

There are a few caveats, though. Telstra notes that its NBN 50 plans may offer download speeds slower than 50Mbps for most Fibre-to-the-Node connections. For its NBN 100 plans, Telstra only sells these to homes connected by Fibre-to-the-Premises, Hybrid Fibre Coaxial and Fibre-to-the-Curb technologies. Similarly, Telstra’s NBN 250 plans are only available to FTTP homes and some HFC homes, while its NBN 1000 plans can only be ordered for FTTP homes and a small number of HFC homes. Because there are only a couple of providers these days that don’t offer parity between max potential NBN 25 download speeds and self-reported typical evening download speeds, Telstra has plenty of competition here. As a more expensive provider, don’t expect to see Telstra listed below, even if its plans boast the same 25Mbps download speeds.