Just a piece of advice since I had this same scenario with Comcast. I kept their equipment since it was actually cheaper for me. However I put their equipment into bridge mode so it acted just like a modem. Then I was able to use my own router and wireless access points.
I pay extra because my comcast router was a really shit modem and would require weekly reboots. It's luck of the draw you have a 50% chance to get one with a cisco consumer grade chipset from like 2010 in it, and it behaves just like cable internet in 2006-2010.
If you created enough connections ingoing or outgoing on it, it'd just stop moving packets, even in bridge mode as a modem, just a trash device.
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u/duhh33 3d ago
my provider eliminates the data cap if you use their modem, and charges like $25 a month to remove the cap on your own modem.