Cox has been the default in Clark County for decades. Most Las Vegas households accepted it simply because nothing better was available.
That default comes with real daily costs.
Cox shares bandwidth across every home on your neighborhood node. When demand peaks across your Summerlin block in the evening everyone slows down together. Upload speeds cap at 35 Mbps on every Cox residential plan regardless of what you pay.
Las Vegas summers make this worse. Extreme heat keeps people indoors for months. Every device runs continuously. Streaming runs all evening. That sustained indoor demand crushes shared Cox nodes across Clark County in ways few other American cities experience at the same intensity.
AT&T Fiber Internet in Las Vegas, Nevada works differently. A dedicated line runs from the AT&T network directly to your home. Nobody on your street shares your bandwidth. Performance holds the same on a peak summer evening as it does on a quiet winter morning.