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Rural Internet in Perry County, AL (2026 Guide)

Rural internet in Perry County, AL gets thin past Marion and Uniontown. Here is the honest 2026 picture and what actually works out in the rural Black Belt.

Perry County sits in the middle of Alabama's Black Belt, a region of dark prairie soil and open farmland in the west-central part of the state. With Marion as its county seat and Uniontown as its other main town, this is a deeply rural county where homes spread thin across cropland and timber once you leave the town centers. It is also one of the harder places in Alabama to buy a reliable internet connection. If you live out here and keep being told no provider services your address, you are not imagining it. This guide lays out, honestly, why rural internet in Perry County, AL is so scarce and what your real options are in 2026.

An Area Documented as Underserved

This is not just a local gripe. Federal broadband data has long identified the rural Deep South, and Alabama's Black Belt in particular, as among the least-connected and lowest-income parts of the country. Perry County, with its low population density and persistent rural poverty, fits that description closely. The problem is structural, not a stroke of bad luck at one house.

The wider numbers make it clearer. According to FCC data, roughly 19.6 million Americans still lack access to fixed 100/20 Mbps broadband, and independent audits suggest the real figure is closer to 26 million. A large share of those unserved homes are in counties just like this one: thinly populated rural areas where wired service never reached the country roads.

Why Marion and Uniontown Country Got Skipped

The reason is not the land. The Black Belt is broad, gently rolling prairie and farmland, the sort of open ground that is easy to build across in theory. The real obstacle is density.

Perry County is sparsely populated, with farmland and timber stretching between the two towns. A mile of buried fiber or coaxial cable out here might pass only a handful of houses spread across a lot of acreage. In a city, that same mile reaches hundreds of homes and pays for itself quickly. The economics that decide where the big cable and fiber companies build never came close to favoring a county this thinly settled. The predictable outcome is that whatever cable and fiber exists clusters in and near Marion and Uniontown, while the rural roads between and beyond them have little or nothing.

What Has Not Worked Well Here

DSL over old telephone copper reaches parts of the county, but the speeds are dated. The farther you sit from the central office, and out here that can be a long way, the slower it runs, often just a few megabits. That is not enough to support a single steady video call, let alone a whole household working and learning online.

Waiting on fiber is the other thing people do, and it is a hard wait. State and federal rural broadband programs have helped some areas, but buildout timelines stretch for years, and a county with this few customers per mile is rarely first in line. Telling a family that wired internet might arrive several years from now does not help when they need a working connection this year.

Fixed Wireless: The Option Worth Checking

For many Perry County homes, the most practical option today does not run through the ground at all. It comes from the air. Even where cable and fiber never reached, cell towers already stand across much of the region, and fixed wireless home internet uses those existing towers instead of waiting on new wire.

Here is how it works. A pre-configured router inside your home receives the LTE or 5G signal from a nearby tower and broadcasts Wi-Fi throughout the house. There is no dish, no trench, and no crew. Where there is usable signal, 4G LTE commonly runs around 20 to 100 Mbps and 5G can exceed 200 Mbps, which is enough for streaming, video calls, and remote work for a whole household. Because the signal comes from a tower a few miles away, latency is lower than satellite, and unlike a dish it is not knocked offline by rain or storms. The open, rolling prairie of the Black Belt can actually help signal carry, since there are few ridges in the way.

How Viper Broadband Can Help

Viper Broadband offers unlimited 4G LTE and 5G fixed-wireless home internet built for rural places exactly like Perry County, working over the cell towers already in the area. It is not satellite and not wired. Plans start at $129.99 per month on the Blue Plan, with no contracts, no data caps, no throttling, and no credit check. The router arrives pre-configured, setup takes about five minutes, and no technician visit is needed. For a home with weaker signal, an optional external antenna, including the 4x4 MIMO option on the 5G router, can often pull in a usable connection a phone inside the house cannot reach.

The honest limit is that fixed wireless only works where there is usable cell signal, so coverage has to be checked at your specific address rather than assumed. That is why Viper Broadband never guarantees coverage in advance. In a county this rural, the only reliable way to know is to check the signal where you actually live.

Perry County has been near the back of the line for wired broadband for a long time, and that is unlikely to change quickly. If you are tired of getting nowhere with a slow or missing connection, check whether fixed wireless reaches your address in or around Marion or Uniontown, and call or text (931) 488-4123 to talk through what is realistic where you live.

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