Speed Test

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بہترین ISP 2026 آج کی سپیڈ رپورٹ ISP موازنہ 5G Pakistan

How PakSpeed ranks cities

PakSpeed ranks Pakistani cities using community speed tests submitted by real users. Each row combines average download speed, average upload speed, ping latency, and the number of completed tests so readers can judge both performance and sample size.

These rankings are useful for checking whether internet service is improving in Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Faisalabad, Multan, Peshawar, Quetta, and other cities. The data is aggregated for public comparison and does not publish personal IP addresses.

For a fuller picture, compare this leaderboard with the ISP table, the community speed map, and the speed test guide. A single test can be affected by Wi-Fi quality, mobile signal, device load, and time of day, so repeated community measurements are more useful than one isolated result.

Download speed

Download speed affects browsing, app updates, streaming, file downloads, online classes, and everyday mobile use. A high city average usually means many users are seeing usable broadband speeds.

Upload speed

Upload speed matters for video calls, WhatsApp media, cloud backups, remote work, livestreaming, and sending files. Cities with weak upload can still feel slow even when download looks acceptable.

Ping and stability

Ping measures delay. Lower ping is better for online games, live meetings, remote teaching, and interactive tools. High ping can make a connection feel poor even if Mbps numbers look strong.

Test count

Total tests show confidence. A city with thousands of measurements gives a stronger public signal than a city with only a few tests from one network or neighborhood.

Use the ranking responsibly

This leaderboard is a live measurement layer, not a permanent certificate for any city. Internet quality can vary street by street because of fiber availability, mobile tower load, backhaul capacity, router placement, package limits, and evening congestion.

If your city ranks low, it does not mean every user has bad service. It means PakSpeed has seen weaker average evidence from the tests currently available. Run your own test during both normal hours and peak hours, then compare your result with your ISP's package promise.

PakSpeed.com gives every Pakistani the right to measure what they're paying for and gives researchers the data to demand better.

How to compare two cities fairly

City rankings become more useful when you compare similar evidence. A large city with many neighborhoods and thousands of tests may show a broad average, while a smaller city with fewer tests can move quickly when new results arrive. Always read download speed, upload speed, ping, and total tests together.

Check the sample

More tests usually mean the result is less likely to be distorted by one router, one mobile tower, one office network, or one unusually slow evening.

Check the time

Peak-hour results between 7 PM and 11 PM are important because they show how networks behave when families, students, workers, and streamers are online together.

Check the provider mix

A city with strong fiber coverage can rank differently from a city dominated by mobile data or DSL. Use the ISP page to see which providers are shaping the city average.

Check your own result

Your home, campus, shop, or office can perform better or worse than the city average. Run a PakSpeed test before judging your exact connection.

For research, journalism, and policy work, this page is best used as a starting point. Follow the ranking into city pages, ISP pages, the map, and the monthly report before making a strong claim about digital inequality or infrastructure quality.

What better city data can unlock

When enough people test from across Pakistan, city rankings can reveal patterns that individual users cannot see alone: which cities have stronger broadband, where upload performance is holding back remote work, where ping is hurting gaming and live classes, and which areas need more community testing.

PakSpeed is designed to turn everyday speed tests into public evidence. Every anonymous test improves the national picture while keeping public reports focused on aggregated city and ISP patterns rather than personal identities.

Next steps: run your own speed test, compare internet providers, open the community speed map, or read the 29,000-test milestone report.