Similarly, it is asked, how expensive is bandwidth?
Compared with the benchmark of $10/Mbps in North America and Europe, Asia's transit pricing is approximately 7x as expensive ($70/Mbps, based on the benchmark). When peering is taken into account, however, the effective price of bandwidth in the region is $32/Mbps.
Subsequently, question is, is it possible to increase bandwidth? While you can prioritize some of your existing bandwidth for specific uses by using packet shaping, this will rarely make a significant impact. The only way to get more bandwidth is to buy more. If your ISP doesn't offer enough bandwidth for your needs: Ditch it and go to another ISP.
Similarly one may ask, what happens if I increase my bandwidth?
More bandwidth means that you'll receive more data at the same time. Your data is just transferred to you at a faster rate because more data can be sent at the same time. It's more efficient, making your internet perceptually faster, not technically faster.
How is bandwidth cost calculated?
- Cost/Usage — Usage cost per GB ($60 for 10 GB = $6 per GB)
- Cost/Bandwidth (Connection speed) — Bandwidth cost per MB ($60 for 25 Mb = $2.40 per Mb.
