New Google Fiber Webpass customers: enter referral code greg-177971 at signup and the cost of your first month is credited back to you (a $70 value). No contract, no catch — here's exactly how it works.
The link above pre-fills the referral field so you can't forget it. Prefer to enter it yourself? Just paste greg-177971 into the referral box during checkout.
Skip the marketing fluff — here's the real mechanics.
When you sign up for Google Fiber Webpass using a referral code, you receive a credit equal to one full month of whatever plan you pick. For the standard residential gigabit plan that's around $70, so your very first bill arrives showing a total of $0 owed.
It's a genuine part of Webpass's official refer-a-friend program. Every existing customer is issued a unique code from their account dashboard, and the company applies the credit on the new customer's behalf — there's nothing unofficial about using one.
Any valid Webpass referral code produces the same one-month credit — the value doesn't change based on whose code it is. The difference is reliability: this is a single, verified code with a working auto-apply link, rather than a list of dozens of unverified codes where you're guessing which still work.
Start to finish, this takes about ten minutes.
Webpass availability is building-by-building, not citywide. Enter your address on the GFiber Webpass site before anything else — if your building isn't wired, no code will help.
Use the auto-apply link so the code is attached automatically. If you start from the plain Webpass homepage instead, look for the "referral code" field and enter greg-177971 manually.
Choose a service plan and finish checkout. Your credit is sized to that plan — pick the gigabit residential plan and the credit covers a gigabit month.
When your first invoice arrives it should total $0. If it doesn't, contact Webpass support before paying — the referral field may not have registered.
A rough guide so you know what the free month is worth.
Webpass keeps its lineup deliberately simple — typically a single gigabit-class residential plan rather than a confusing tier ladder. Pricing varies slightly by building and city, so treat the figures below as ballpark, not gospel.
| Plan type | Typical speed | Rough monthly cost |
|---|---|---|
| Residential gigabit (monthly) | ~1 Gbps | ~$70/mo |
| Residential gigabit (annual prepay) | ~1 Gbps | Discounted vs. monthly |
| Lower-speed plans (some buildings) | Varies | Lower, building-dependent |
It's not the same as standard Google Fiber.
Regular Google Fiber runs physical cable directly into your home — which means street construction and slow rollouts. Webpass takes a different route: it sends a high-capacity wireless signal to an antenna mounted on your building's roof, then carries that connection down to your unit over the building's existing wiring.
That's why Webpass is concentrated in dense apartments and condos in big cities — it can light up a whole building quickly without digging up the street. The trade-off is the building-by-building eligibility: it's all or nothing for a given address.
Remote work & video calls — yes, gigabit-class speeds with low latency handle this easily. Gaming — generally solid, though as a fixed-wireless link, weather and building equipment can occasionally matter more than on buried fiber. Streaming a busy household — a gigabit plan comfortably covers multiple 4K streams at once.
Select metros across the US — but always check your specific address.
Being in one of these cities isn't a guarantee — Webpass serves select buildings, mostly larger residential and commercial properties. The address checker on the GFiber Webpass site is the only definitive answer.
The things people ask before signing up.
One click applies the code and starts your Webpass signup.
Apply code & sign up →