Common Zoom Problems

This page gives some quick tips on improving Zoom performance.  

It's actually fairly rare for Zoom issues to be caused by a home internet connection that's "too slow" - there's a more detailed explanation for this further down, but here are a few easy ways to improve Zoom performance, most of which will be applicable to other video tools as well:

Zoom and home network bandwidth:

The total bandwidth required by Zoom is actually not that high, so most home connections should be able to support it.  

Your home connection has a rated maximum speed in megabits.  There's a "down" speed for the data that's coming from the outside world into your house (like streaming video that you're watching) and an "up" speed that's the data to the outside world from your house to (like the images from your camera).  

Because home internet connections are heavily used for things like streaming video, they usually have much better "down" speed than "up" speed.  

My fairly typical home internet connection ("Cox Preferred") can do 150 megabits down but only 10 megabits up.  So it's usually the "up" that you'll end up having trouble with since that runs out first.

As a rule of thumb, for each person in your house using Zoom or a similar product at the same time you should have 1.5 megabits of available "up" speed and 1.5 megabits of available "down" speed.  This means that my connection should be able to support about six people using Zoom at the same time.

Nearly all (urban/suburban) home internet connections are quite a bit faster than 1.5 megabits. This means if you're the only person using a video chat program at home it's often not a bandwidth issue that's causing freezes, etc.  It's more often an issue with the connection between your computer and your base station, or possibly a problem on the computer itself.  Before paying to upgrade your home connection, have a look at the tips above and see if they help.