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The $35,000 Internet Bill: Inside Venue Rate Cards | EC101

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Here is a real quote an event team received from a venue: $35,000 for 25 Mbps of dedicated bandwidth over 4 days.

Do the arithmetic before the sticker shock wears off. That’s $7,500 per day. It’s $300 per day, per megabit-class of service. The phone in your pocket, on a decent 5G signal, will outrun 25 Mbps without trying. The venue was charging a Ferrari price for a golf cart, and — here’s the part that matters — the event almost paid it, because “that’s what venue internet costs.”

It isn’t. It’s what renting the venue’s infrastructure costs. Those are different things, and the difference is worth six figures a year to anyone who does events for a living.

What the rate card actually says

Pull any major venue’s exhibitor services order form and you’ll find the same structure:

  • Hardline drops: $800–$2,500 each. That’s per cable, per event. A modest production with three drops pays $2,400–$7,500 for copper it hands back at load-out.
  • WiFi SSIDs: $500–$1,500 each. You’re paying four figures to rent a network name.
  • Dedicated bandwidth: $10,000–$35,000+ depending on speed and days. Our $35k/25 Mbps example is not an outlier; it’s a data point from a real order form.
  • Deadlines and late fees. Orders are typically due 30 or more days out. Miss the deadline — because your client changed the show scope, which clients do — and the late penalty runs 20–40%.

And after you pay all of it, you get one wired path. One cable, one conduit, one contractor. If it fails mid-keynote, your recourse is a service ticket.

Why this pricing survives

Venue internet is priced like this because it can be. The exclusive show-services contractor faces no competition inside the building, the cost lands late in the budget cycle when nobody has energy to fight it, and the buyer believes there’s no alternative. For twenty years, there mostly wasn’t.

Then two things changed: 5G got fast and plentiful across multiple carriers, and Peplink’s SpeedFusion made it possible to bond several of those connections — plus Starlink, plus any wired line you already have — into a single, unbreakable connection. This is what we call the New Enterprise approach: stop building infrastructure, start bonding connectivity.

The owned alternative, priced honestly

The workhorse for production-scale events is the Peplink MAX HD4 MBX: four 5G modems, running SIMs from multiple carriers simultaneously, bonded by SpeedFusion into one connection with hot-failover and WAN smoothing.

  • Hardware: ~$15,000, one time. You own it.
  • Service and data: ~$250 per month-or-event.
  • Bandwidth: hundreds of Mbps aggregate — routinely 10× that $35k “dedicated” line.
  • Deployment: the day you arrive. No order form, no deadline, no late fee.

Now run the math the way a CFO would:

Horizon Venue rate card Owned bonded kit You keep
Event 1 $35,000 $15,000 + $250 = $15,250 $14,750
5 events $150,000 $16,250 $133,750
20 events $700,000 $20,000 $580,000

Look at event one again. The venue was going to charge $35,000 for 4 days — $7,500 per day. The kit costs $15,250 total. By the end of day 2, the hardware has fully paid for itself against the fee you didn’t write a check for. From event two onward, your connectivity line item is roughly $250 instead of $35,000: ~$34,750 saved per event, forever. There aren’t many purchases in the event business with a payback period measured in days.

“But we’ve been burned by cellular”

You’ve been burned by a single cellular connection — one SIM, one carrier, one hotspot, dying the moment the crowd arrived. Bonding is the opposite architecture: four modems on different carriers, traffic steered packet-by-packet to whichever paths have capacity, with Starlink available as a path that never touches the congested towers at all. It’s the architecture West Networks has deployed at golf majors, Formula 1, and SailGP — environments where 50,000+ devices are fighting for spectrum and failure is broadcast live. (We cover congestion in depth in the next post in this series.)

What to do with your next rate card

Don’t throw it away — bring it to us. We’ll put it next to an owned-kit quote, line by line, with a payback date on it. If your venue quote is smaller than the kit, we’ll tell you that too; the math is the math. That’s the whole point of a site called 101: we teach, you decide.

  • Talk to West Networks → https://westnetworks.com/contact?utm_source=eventconnectivity101.com&utm_medium=microsite&utm_campaign=connectivity101-event&utm_content=30000-dollar-internet-bill-venue-rate-cards
  • Shop the solution → https://buypeplink.com/products/max-hd4-mbx?utm_source=eventconnectivity101.com&utm_medium=microsite&utm_campaign=connectivity101-event&utm_content=30000-dollar-internet-bill-venue-rate-cards

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