— Recent advances in Internet measurement tools have made it possible to locate bottleneck links that constrain the available bandwidth of Internet paths. In this paper, we provide a detailed study of Internet path bottlenecks. We focus on the following four aspects: the persistence of bottleneck location, the sharing of bottlenecks among destination clusters, the packet loss and queueing delay of bottleneck links, and the relationship with router and link properties, including router CPU load, router memory load, link traffic load, and link capacity. We find that 20% – 30% of the source-destination pairs in our measurement have a persistent bottleneck; fewer than 10% of the destinations in a prefix cluster share a bottleneck more than half of the time; 60% of the bottlenecks on lossy paths can be correlated with a loss point no more than 2 hops away; and bottlenecks can be clearly correlated with link load, while presenting no strong relationship with link capacity, router CPU ...