Japan has shattered records with the world’s fastest internet speed — an astonishing 3.5 million times faster than the average internet speed in the United States. This technological leap means that downloading the entire Netflix library would take just one second in Japan, a feat that seems almost unimaginable elsewhere where streaming or game downloads often require minutes or even hours.
This groundbreaking achievement was made possible thanks to a collaboration between Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), Sumitomo Electric, and European partners. Together, they developed a cutting-edge network that uses a special fiber optic cable with 19 cores, each just 0.125 millimeters thick, capable of transmitting data at an incredible speed over a distance of 1,808 kilometers per second.
The system features 21 loops of fiber optic cable, each 86.1 kilometers long, allowing 180 data streams to travel simultaneously. This design set a historic record of 1.86 exabits per second times kilometers — the highest data transmission ever recorded.
To put this speed into perspective: Japan’s internet can download the entire English Wikipedia 10,000 times in just one second, stream or save 8K videos instantly, and transfer Steam’s entire game library of 1.2 petabytes in only 10 seconds. Music enthusiasts could even download more than 127,000 years’ worth of songs in a flash, creating the ultimate never-ending playlist.
Unfortunately for users outside Japan, such speeds are unlikely to be available soon elsewhere. The United States, for example, is still working to modernize its internet infrastructure and is nowhere near matching Japan’s level of innovation in high-speed data transmission. For now, Japan remains the clear global leader in internet speed and technology advancement, setting a new standard for what’s possible in digital connectivity.

