Gem Net Pakistan

StormFibre Internet Packages — Triple Play Plans & Prices 2026

By the Gem Net editorial team · Updated Friday, June 12, 2026

StormFibre is the fibre brand of Cybernet, one of Pakistan's oldest ISPs, and it sells exactly one product shape: Triple Play. Every package bundles internet, TV, and phone — there is no internet-only tier to strip the price down. The lineup runs five packages from a budget 10 Mbps entry to a gigabit flagship, all on one-month validity with prices exclusive of tax. The full table, the installation math, and where StormFibre beats PTCL and Nayatel follow.

Top questions answered

Can I get StormFibre internet without the TV and phone services?

No — every StormFibre package is Triple Play by design. Internet, TV, and phone come bundled at one price whether you use all three or not. Households that only want internet still pay the bundle price; the comparison against internet-only competitors should use the full monthly figure, not an imagined unbundled one.

What is the cheapest StormFibre package in 2026?

Triple Typhoon Promo 2.0 at Rs. 1,999 monthly for 10 Mbps down and 25 Mbps up, with a Rs. 9,999 installation charge. Note the unusual install pricing: the Thunder and Blizzard tiers above it carry lower installation fees, so the cheapest monthly is not the cheapest first-year total.

Is the StormFibre Wi-Fi access point charge monthly or one-time?

One-time — Rs. 4,700 across all packages, and optional. The standard installation includes a basic router; the AP is an add-on for larger homes needing more wireless coverage. Buying your own mesh system instead is perfectly acceptable and often better value for multi-storey houses.

The Triple Play philosophy and what it means for buyers

StormFibre's single-shape catalogue is a deliberate simplification: one decision (which speed), not three (which services). The TV service rides the fibre to a set-top box with the mainstream Pakistani lineup; the phone line is VoIP with its own number. For households that would have bought all three anyway, the bundle prices well against assembling the parts. For internet-only buyers, the honest comparison is StormFibre's full price against competitors' internet-only tiers — and even then the lower StormFibre tiers stay competitive, because Cybernet prices the bundle aggressively to win the connection.

All five StormFibre packages, with exact 2026 pricing

The lineup below lists download/upload speed, the one-time installation charge, monthly fee, and the optional Wi-Fi access point. All packages are Triple Play on one-month validity; prices exclude tax. Note that installation charges do not scale with the monthly fee — the entry Typhoon tier carries a higher install than the mid-range Thunder and Blizzard tiers, which matters for first-year cost math.

PackageSpeed (down/up)InstallationMonthlyWi-Fi AP
Triple Hurricane Promo 2.01000/115 MbpsRs. 11,499Rs. 9,999Rs. 4,700 (optional)
Triple Tornado Promo50/70 MbpsRs. 11,499Rs. 5,999Rs. 4,700 (optional)
Triple Thunder Promo 2.030/50 MbpsRs. 7,999Rs. 3,999Rs. 4,700 (optional)
Triple Blizzard Promo20/40 MbpsRs. 6,999Rs. 2,999Rs. 4,700 (optional)
Triple Typhoon Promo 2.010/25 MbpsRs. 9,999Rs. 1,999Rs. 4,700 (optional)

All packages are Triple Play (Internet + TV + Phone). Validity: One Month. Prices exclusive of tax.

First-year cost math across the tiers

Because installation varies independently of the monthly fee, the first-year totals reorder the lineup. Thunder 2.0 — Rs. 7,999 install plus twelve months at Rs. 3,999 — totals Rs. 55,987, while the nominally cheaper Typhoon totals Rs. 33,987 but delivers a third of Thunder's download. Blizzard at Rs. 42,987 first-year is the value midpoint most ordinary households should anchor on: 20/40 Mbps covers simultaneous streaming and calls, and the per-Mbps cost beats both tiers below and above it. Hurricane buyers aren't doing this math — gigabit is a requirement or a luxury, never a value calculation.

Where StormFibre wins, loses, and ties

Wins: top-end speed per rupee (Hurricane against anything), upload-heavy lower tiers, and Karachi coverage where it is frequently the only fibre on the street. Loses: footprint breadth against PTCL everywhere, and support reputation against Nayatel in the cities they share — StormFibre's fault response is adequate rather than celebrated. Ties: mid-tier pricing against PTCL Flash Fiber, where the choice reasonably comes down to which provider's local crew and sales experience your neighbours vouch for. The street-level reference check matters more with StormFibre than any national generalisation, because Cybernet's service quality has historically varied by area more than its competitors'.

Ordering StormFibre: process and practical notes

Orders run through stormfibre.pk's coverage check or the sales line, with installation typically inside a week for covered addresses. Three notes from subscriber experience. Confirm the total day-one figure in writing — install plus first month plus tax plus any AP — because the quoted "package price" is only the monthly line. Ask about install waivers; like every Pakistani ISP, StormFibre runs them cyclically. And test the included router's reach before the crew leaves, deciding on the Rs. 4,700 AP while adding it is a five-minute extension rather than a second visit.

The TV and phone components, examined honestly

Since every subscriber pays for all three services, the secondary two deserve scrutiny. The TV service delivers the mainstream Pakistani lineup through a set-top box with serviceable — not premium — picture quality; sports rights rotate seasonally, and households anchored on a specific league should verify current carriage before treating the TV component as a cable replacement. The phone line is the quiet asset: a stable published number, independent of any mobile SIM, that banks and couriers can hold on file. Small-office users in particular report the landline's value exceeding the TV's — a reversal of how the bundle is marketed.

A renewal-discipline note for the prepaid-style billing: service suspension on a missed renewal also takes down the phone line, which surprises subscribers using it as their bank-registered number. Autopay, or a calendar reminder two days before the cycle ends, keeps the number continuously reachable — the failure mode is rare but disproportionately annoying when a bank verification call hits a dead line.

Who should shortlist StormFibre in 2026

Three buyer profiles get the most from the lineup. Karachi households outside PTCL's fibre map and beyond Nayatel's absent footprint — StormFibre is frequently their only FTTH path. Upload-sensitive users at modest budgets, for whom the inverted speed pairs on the lower tiers deliver video-call stability that download-biased competitors miss at the price. And speed maximalists, for whom Hurricane's gigabit at Rs. 9,999 is simply the most download per rupee sold in Pakistan. Buyers outside those profiles should run the three-way comparison on their specific street, because between the profiles StormFibre is competitive rather than dominant.

The shortlist exercise costs one evening: collect the three providers' quotes for your address, ask two neighbours which crew they'd call again, and weigh the first-year totals rather than the monthly headline. Street-level service variance decides more StormFibre outcomes than any spec sheet.

And if the quotes tie, the install-fee variance is the cleanest tiebreaker — it's the only number in the comparison paid once rather than argued about monthly.

Verify before relying: Package data reflects StormFibre's published Triple Play lineup as verified in Q2 2026. All prices are exclusive of tax; the optional Wi-Fi access point is a one-time charge. Confirm current promos with StormFibre sales before ordering.

Other StormFibre questions

The published pairs on several tiers — 10/25, 20/40, 30/50 — list download first and a higher upload figure, an unusual asymmetry that favours video calls, content uploads, and cloud backups. For remote workers whose pain point is upload, the lower StormFibre tiers punch above their download numbers.

Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad/Rawalpindi, Faisalabad, and Multan are the established footprint, with coverage street-by-street within each. Karachi is its deepest market — areas of the city neither Nayatel (absent entirely) nor PTCL fibre reaches often have StormFibre as the only FTTH option.

StormFibre bills on prepaid-style monthly cycles: pay, get thirty days of service, renew. Miss the renewal and service suspends rather than accruing arrears — closer to a mobile bundle's rhythm than PTCL's postpaid invoicing. Autopay through card or wallet removes the monthly friction.

The line rental is inside the bundle; calls bill per PTCL-comparable usage rates on top. Most subscribers treat the phone service as a free extra they rarely use — its practical value is having a stable number for banks and deliveries that doesn't depend on a mobile SIM.

Hurricane 2.0 delivers 1000/115 Mbps at Rs. 9,999 monthly against PTCL's 500 Mbps at Rs. 13,999 — double the headline speed at Rs. 4,000 less, where both are available. PTCL counters with footprint and the priority-support tier. For raw speed per rupee at the top end, Hurricane is the market's standout figure.