Is Shentel down?
Working normallyShentel appears to be working normally — report volume is within the typical range for this time of day.
- reportInternet — United States 🇺🇸1d ago
- reportProblem report — Hurt, United States 🇺🇸3d ago
- reportProblem report — Waynesboro, United States 🇺🇸4d ago
- reportProblem report — Hurt, United States 🇺🇸4d ago
- reportProblem report — United States 🇺🇸5d ago
- reportProblem report — United States 🇺🇸6d ago
- reportProblem report — Brooklyn, United States 🇺🇸7d ago
Shentel Outage Map
What’s typical for Shentel
Shentel reliability
Based on no recorded incidents over the last 12 months.
Outage history
No incidents recorded in the last 12 months.
Comments
About Shentel
Shentel Corporation is a telecommunications provider headquartered in Edinburg, Virginia. The company operates in rural areas of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. Shentel offers a range of services including high-speed internet, video, and voice services to residential and business customers. They also provide fiber-optic networking and data transport services to enterprise and carrier customers
Frequently asked questions
Is Shentel down right now?
Shentel appears to be working normally — report volume is within the typical range for this time of day.
Why is Shentel not working for me?
We're not detecting a broad Shentel outage right now, so a problem is most likely local to you — your internet connection, device, or the app. Try restarting the app, then your router. If many people report the same issue, this page will update to show it.
When was the last Shentel outage?
We have no recorded outages for Shentel yet.
How do I report a Shentel problem?
Use the “Report a problem” button on this page and choose what's not working. Reports are anonymous and update the live status and outage map in real time.
How does Outage.Report know if Shentel is down?
We aggregate anonymous user reports and monitor public social-media posts, comparing live volume against Shentel's normal baseline for the time of day and region to detect anomalies — often before they're officially confirmed.





