The independent MDU connectivity segment grew up fragmented. Now, the economies of scale, the direction of capital, and a strategic shift among the largest broadband operators are all pointing in the same direction. This first part lays out the forces pulling the market toward a smaller number of larger players.
This is the first in a three-part Maravedis series on the consolidation of MDU connectivity. Part 1 lays out the forces pulling the market toward scale; Part 2 maps the operators consolidating and the squeeze on those caught in the middle; and Part 3 turns to the resulting barbell market and the integration test that decides which platforms win.
Key takeaways
● The core single-family broadband business is repricing downward, with ARPU falling across providers and cable EBITDA contracting, pushing the largest operators to treat multifamily as a strategic growth asset rather than a set of addresses to pass.
● Per-door economics, the concentration of demand among the largest property owners, and the direction of institutional capital all reward scale, leaving little room for the subscale operator.
● A consolidation wave is already underway, and a smaller cohort of larger players will define the next decade of the managed Wi-Fi market.
For most of its history, the managed service provider segment in U.S. multifamily looked the way young industries usually look. It was populated by dozens of regional operators, each carrying a few thousand to a few tens of thousands of units, each built on a founder relationship with a handful of property owners, and each running its own blend of equipment vendors, support practices, and contract structures. Fragmentation was not a flaw. It was the natural state of a market where penetration was low, capital was patient, and a good local reputation could carry a company a long way.
That market is now changing shape. Maravedis counts roughly 26.9 million U.S. multifamily rental units, of which managed Wi-Fi reached only 6% in 2025, a figure Maravedis projects will more than double to 12-15% by 2031, while bulk internet rises from near 17% of the rental stock today to 33% over the same period. The runway is enormous, but the path to capturing it no longer favors the small. Capital intensity, customer concentration, regulatory complexity, a relentless technology refresh cycle, and a new strategic interest from the largest operators in the country are all rewarding scale at the expense of fragmentation. The result is a consolidation wave already underway and a smaller cohort of larger players that will define the market's next decade.
The largest operators now treat multifamily as a strategic asset
The strongest pull toward consolidation no longer comes only from within the MSP segment. It is coming from above it, from the major cable MSOs and the Tier 1 telcos, who have begun to treat multifamily as a strategic asset rather than as just another set of addresses to pass. The reason is the deteriorating economics of their core single-family business.
As I discussed in my recent blog Bleeding Subscribers, Flat ARPU: The MDU Answer US Broadband Keeps Circling, the first quarter of 2026 was a reckoning for fixed broadband. Charter shed roughly 120,000 broadband subscribers and guided residential ARPU to remain flat near $ 71, and its stock fell by more than half over the year. Optimum lost about 64,000. With network speeds converged to the point that 200 megabits feels identical to 300 in daily use, the network itself has stopped winning customers, and the tens of billions in annual capital expenditure now buy parity rather than advantage. Convergence, the industry reflex of bundling mobile with broadband, is in one analyst’s phrase an elevated name for a discount: it makes a household stickier by making the relationship cheaper, defending the account without lifting the revenue ceiling. Even fiber is fragile, fought house by house, with take rates stuck around 45 to 47 percent and more than half of the homes passed generating no revenue at all.
The first-quarter 2026 results that followed only sharpened the picture. Broadband ARPU fell across every major provider, and the carriers were explicit about the trade-off, with AT&T and Verizon both signaling they would chase subscribers even at the expense of ARPU, treating that trade-off as rational. AT&T cut entry-level fiber prices in June even as fiber growth slowed. Charter, having shed those subscribers, also watched its broadband ARPU barely move, walked away from its stated goal of growing ARPU, and saw its shares fall sharply on the print. Optimum reported declining broadband ARPU and wrote down $ 2.7 billion in cable-franchise assets, a reduction of roughly 25 percent, as its free cash flow turned negative. Across the sector, cable EBITDA contracted while the wireless and telco sides kept growing, widening the gap between the two to a record high. The core business is not merely soft. It is repricing downward, and the operators know it.
Multifamily inverts almost every term in that equation. A single bulk agreement converts a building of individually churning subscribers into a single multi-year account with near-total penetration by design, collapsing per-door acquisition costs and extending revenue visibility from billing cycles to years. The unit of revenue shifts from the user to the account, from ARPU to ARPA, and the managed network becomes the platform for a Smart Building as a Service stack, spanning access control, energy management, environmental sensing, and the resident application that expands the bill rather than discounting it. As Maravedis argued in The Building Is the Network, that managed network is becoming a connected property intelligence platform, with IoT, edge AI, carrier Wi-Fi offload, and fixed-mobile convergence stacking as distinct revenue streams on a single infrastructure. Maravedis sizes the managed-service-provider opportunity in U.S. multifamily growing from 8.9 billion dollars in 2025 to 13.7 billion dollars by 2031, anchored by contracts that typically run seven to ten years. For an operator staring at flat ARPU and contested single-family households, that contracted, account-level, expanding revenue is the most rational growth story on the table.
The consequence for market structure is direct. As Maravedis showed in Scale Versus Service: Why the Top 10 US Broadband Operators Do Not Own the MDU Market, the national giants dominate the subscriber rankings but engage multifamily transactionally, selling circuits without taking responsibility for property-wide Wi-Fi, PropTech integration, or resident support, and that operational gap is exactly where the independent MSPs built their businesses. Closing it is not something an operator can do on a building-by-building basis. When an MSO or a Tier 1 telco decides multifamily is strategic, it moves through platforms: acquiring established MDU operators, standing up dedicated connected-communities units, or entering open-access structures that split infrastructure ownership from the customer relationship, as the AT&T and BlackRock Gigapower joint venture does. Their arrival is the single largest accelerant of consolidation in the segment, because it places a well-capitalized, strategically motivated buyer on the other side of every independent operator’s cap table. The fragmented market that the national carriers once ignored is now the market they most want to own.
The case for scale starts with the math inside a single property
Consolidation arguments usually open with abstractions about synergy. The more honest starting point is per-door economics. A managed Wi-Fi contract carries a fixed cost of acquisition, design, and engineering that is largely independent of property size, and a recurring support cost that falls, per unit, as the building gets larger. A 250-unit community and a 40-unit community require similar sales effort, network design work, and onboarding, but the larger property spreads that effort across six times as many doors. The same logic compounds at the portfolio level. An operator with a national footprint can serve a REIT across dozens of assets under one contract, one support organization, and one technology standard, while a regional operator has to win each of those assets one relationship at a time.
This is why the unit of analysis that matters for the buyer is not always the unit. For a property owner deciding who to trust with resident connectivity, the relevant question is increasingly whether a provider can serve the whole portfolio, not just the building in front of them. As Maravedis documented in Inside the NMHC Top 50’s Outsized Tech Influence, the fifty largest owners control only about 11 percent of the national rental stock but set the technology standard the other 89 percent follow, and the likes of Greystar, Cortland, and UDR now treat property-wide managed Wi-Fi as a baseline design requirement rather than a negotiated add-on. That concentration of standard-setting demand pulls the market toward operators large enough to say yes to a whole portfolio, and it leaves boutique operators competing for the assets the large players have not yet reached.
Capital has already chosen its side
The clearest signal of where the market is heading is where the money is going. Over the past several years, the most active independent MSPs have taken on private equity recapitalizations and institutional infrastructure capital, and the largest names in infrastructure investing have moved directly into the MDU connectivity space. Hotwire passed to Brookfield Infrastructure in 2025. WOW! sits under DigitalBridge. Mereo Fiber is backed by Macquarie Capital alongside Wave Division Capital and Freedom Three, and it has openly positioned itself as a consolidation platform, describing one of the healthiest balance sheets in the independent broadband segment. Zentro, the largest independent multifamily ISP in the country at more than 120,000 units across over 20 markets, drew an equity recapitalization led by Greystar Infrastructure in June 2026, with StepStone Group participating and prior backer M|C Partners retaining a strategic stake; capital the company has earmarked explicitly for organic and acquisition-driven growth. Smartaira recapitalized with a private equity partner and used the balance sheet to accelerate the deployment of managed Wi-Fi and multi-gig services across 28 states. Pavlov Media, the most active acquirer in the open Wi-Fi ecosystem, is held by Macquarie Asset Management.
Infrastructure capital does not enter a market to run boutique operations. It enters to build scaled platforms that can absorb smaller operators, standardize them, and compound returns across a larger asset base. The presence of Brookfield, DigitalBridge, Macquarie, and a deep bench of private equity sponsors is not incidental to the consolidation thesis. It is the engine of it. These investors bring the patient, low-cost capital required to fund brownfield retrofits, multi-gig backbones, and Wi-Fi 7 upgrades at a pace that founder-funded operators cannot match, and they expect roll-up returns in exchange.
Those forces explain why consolidation is happening and why it rewards scale. They do not, on their own, tell you who is doing the consolidating, or whether the consolidators can deliver on the promise of scale once they have bought it. This is the first of a three-part series. Part 2 classifies the segment by ownership, names the operators in each camp, and examines the cost pressures that are turning the middle of the market into acquisition inventory. Part 3 describes the market structure that results, a barbell of scaled national platforms and durable boutiques, and turns to the operational test that decides which platforms actually win: whether they can integrate the networks they buy.
Maravedis sizes and tracks this market in the Multifamily Rental Connectivity Market Analysis 2026-2031, and works directly with operators, investors, and property owners through our strategy consulting practice. For a briefing on where the market is heading and how to position for it, contact info@maravedis-bwa.com.