Vodafone UK Sale Offers 12 Months Half Price Business Broadband | ISPreview UK

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Mobile and internet provider Vodafone Business this week launched their Winter Sale Offers, which means that new small business customers can get 12 months half price on all their Business Broadband Plans. But the offer will only be available to order until Wednesday 4th March 2026.

The discount means that, for example, a new business customer taking their 910Mbps speed package on CityFibre’s network (Openreach and Community Fibre also available at different costs) will pay just £20.75 per month for the first 12-months. All packages also include unlimited usage, free installation and a wireless router.

The catch is that – across a 36-month business term (24-month terms are also available at extra cost) and using the above example – they still apply a mid-contract price hike of £2.92 +vat from April every year, which does make the contracted monthly pricing structure quite tedious: Price increases to £23.67 from April 2026, then £44.42 on 9th January 2027, then £47.33 from April 2027 and £50.25 from April 2028.

iD Mobile UK Commits to Maintaining Fixed Price SIM-only Plans | ISPreview UK

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Low-cost mobile operator iD Mobile (Currys), which harnesses Three UK’s (VodafoneThree) national 4G and 5G network via a virtual operator (mvno) partnership, has moved to shun the growing sea of recent mid-contract price hikes from rival broadband and mobile providers by confirming their “commitment to Fixed Price SIM-only plans with no annual price rises” for another year.

As usual, all of iD Mobile’s plans come with access to 5G, unlimited calls and texts, free Data Rollover and inclusive Roaming in 50 destinations worldwide as standard (there’s a 30GB data limit on roaming, if your UK allowance is 30GB or more). Customers can take a cheaper 24-month term or optionally also take shorter 12-month and 1-month (no contract) plans, but the latter comes at extra cost.

NOTE: iD Mobile is now home to a total UK customer base of 2.3 million.

Naturally, iD Mobile aren’t merely doing this to make a moral point, but also to highlight their latest batch of SIM Only and handset offers for January 2026. We’ve summarised all of these below using our affiliate links (some of these are exclusive promotions).

Latest SIMO deals:

Latest Android deals:

Latest iPhone deals:

R100 Gigabit Broadband Rollout Reaches 96,347 Premises in Scotland | ISPreview UK

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The Scottish Government (SG) has revealed that 96,347 premises have now benefitted from their £697m Reaching 100% (R100) project with Openreach (up from 93,800 in Nov 2025), which is rolling out full fibre (FTTP) broadband to remote rural areas. The next areas set for upgrade include Hoy in Orkney, Kilmartin in Argyll and Bute, and Inchture in Perth and Kinross.

The R100 scheme aims to reach another 113,000 premises – split across three contracts – in areas that lack access to “superfast broadband” (30Mbps+) by March 2028. The most challenging LOT 1 (North Scotland and the Highlands) area is expected to cover around 61,000 premises by 2027/28, while LOT 2 (Central Scotland) was due to reach 32,000 by 2023/24 and LOT 3 (South Scotland) targeted 22,000 by 2024/25 – the latter two have largely already been achieved.

R100 Funding: SG (£591m), BT (£53m) and Building Digital UK (£52m). The responsibility for broadband in Scotland is reserved to Westminster, but that doesn’t stop local and devolved authorities from making their own investments.

Just for some wider context. At the end of 2025 some 84.18% of premises in Scotland could access a gigabit-capable (1Gbps download) broadband ISP network and this falls to 74.45% when only looking at FTTP technology (here). Ofcom predicts that Scotland’s full fibre (FTTP) coverage will reach somewhere between 81-93% by January 2028, rising to 87-94% for gigabit-capable broadband (FTTP + Hybrid Fibre Coax / cable).

However, it should be noted that the 96,347 figure also includes vouched funded projects and some additional build (overspill), which catches the extra premises that Openreach picks up while working within the same areas on the R100 build (we don’t know how big this is for each area).

Broadband connections delivered by contract area (19th Dec 2025)
Contract area Total premises for delivery in the R100 contracts R100 contract premises delivered R100 SBVS (voucher) premises delivered
Central 30,286 32,204 1,835
North 60,764 31,237 3,576
South 21,889 26,841 654
Total 112,939 90,282 6,065

The R100 roll-out is still ongoing, but we should point out that Openreach (BT) and GoFibre have separately also recently secured several public subsidised Project Gigabit broadband roll-out contracts for Scotland (here, here and here), which will extend FTTP to an additional 139,000 premises in remote rural areas (focusing on the bits that R100 fails to reach) via an additional public subsidy total of around £288m.

Starlink Secure Approval to Launch 7,500 Faster LEO Broadband Satellites | ISPreview UK

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The Starlink (SpaceX) service, which offers ultrafast broadband speeds to the UK and globally via a massive global constellation of satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), has secured regulatory approval to launch 7,500 more satellites (albeit not quite the 22,000 they had originally wanted); these will sit at lower orbits, use more radio frequencies and deliver faster speeds.

Just for context. Starlink currently has around 9,400 satellites in Low Earth Orbit (c.6,000 are v2 / GEN2 variants) – mostly at altitudes of c.340-525km. Residential customers in the UK usually pay from £55 a month for the ‘Residential Lite’ unlimited data plan directly from Starlink (kit price may vary due to different offers), which promises downloads of up to 250Mbps (175Mbps average) and uploads of c.15-35Mbps. Faster packages exist at greater cost, while cheaper, albeit more restrictive (data capped), options also exist for roaming users (e.g. £50 per month for 50 GigaBytes of data).

NOTE: By the end of July 2025 Starlink’s global network had 6 million customers and 110,000 of those were in the UK (up from 87,000 in 2024) – mostly in rural areas.

Under the latest grant (via PC Mag) from the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC), SpaceX will now be authorised to “construct, deploy, and operate an additional 7,500 Gen2 Starlink satellites, bringing the total to 15,000 satellites worldwide” (19,400 if we include earlier clearances for GEN1 satellites). The expansion will enable SpaceX to “deliver high-speed, low-latency internet service globally, including enhanced mobile and supplemental coverage from space“.

FCC Chairman Carr said: “This FCC authorization is a game-changer for enabling next-generation services. By authorizing 15,000 new and advanced satellites, the FCC has given SpaceX the green light to deliver unprecedented satellite broadband capabilities, strengthen competition, and help ensure that no community is left behind.”

The decision allows SpaceX to:

➤ Upgrade the Gen2 Starlink satellites with advanced form factors and cutting-edge technology.

➤ Operate across Ku-, Ka-, V-, E-, and W-band frequencies, supporting both Fixed Satellite Service (FSS) and Mobile Satellite Service (MSS).

NOTE: This also allows Starlink to communicate using the 1980-2000 MHz (Earth-to-space), 2000-2020MHz (Earth-to-space), and 2180-2200MHz (space-to-Earth) frequencies outside the U.S. with up to 7,500 satellites.

➤ Waive obsolete requirements that prevented overlapping beam coverage and enhanced capacity.

➤ Add new orbital shells at [even lower] altitudes ranging from 340km to 485km, optimizing coverage and performance (supporting this recent news).

NOTE: In the 340 km. 345 km. 350 km. 355 km. and 365 km orbital shells. SpaceX is authorised to operate in up to 72 planes per shell with up to 144 satellites per plane. In the 480 km and 485 km orbital shells, SpaceX is authorised to operate in up to 56 planes per shell with up to 120 satellites per plane.

➤ Provide direct-to-cell connectivity outside the United States and supplemental coverage within the U.S., paving the way for next-generation mobile services.

According to the FCC: “The Gen2 Starlink Upgrade satellites, including an increased number of satellites, will allow for higher capacity to serve additional customers and gigabit speed service, including symmetrical download and upload speeds.”

The focus above is clearly on enhancements being made to existing launch plans of their second generation (GEN2) satellites. But it should be noted that SpaceX has also developed a larger and more sophisticated GEN3 satellite for future launches (summary of GEN3 details and here); albeit only once their Starship rocket is finally ready (expected in H1 this year), as they need to be able to launch 50-60 GEN3s per flight for commercial viability.

Each one of their GEN3 satellites are designed to provide over 1 Terabit per second of downlink capacity (1,000Gbps+) and over 200Gbps of uplink capacity to customers on the ground. But in the meantime, it makes sense for SpaceX to continue launching GEN2 satellites with additional enhancements to help it keep up with demand and remain competitive as new rivals emerge (e.g. Amazon’s Leo).

Wildanet Tackle Broadband Service Outages at Multiple Sites in South West England | ISPreview UK

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Customers of alternative broadband provider Wildanet, which has built a new Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) network across rural parts of Cornwall and Devon in South West England, have reported a number of different services outages on the network following the impact of last night’s Storm Goretti event.

In a brief statement, posted at 8:28pm last night, the provider said: “We are aware of service interruptions at multiple Wildanet Service Locations. These are related to Storm Goretti. We are actively working with 3rd parties to resolve these issues, please check back for updates.”

NOTE: Wildanet is supported by an investment of £100m from Gresham House and £35m from the National Wealth Fund (formerly UKIB).

At the time of writing, the ISP has not provided any further updates, although some of those affected have informed ISPreview that they’re still offline. One of the confirmed incidents appears to include the outage of an FTTP broadband cabinet in the village of Germoe, which is impacting 152 subscribers but appears to have been caused by a power cut linked to Storm damage (here); possibly a damaged overhead power cable or pole. 

Openreach’s services in the same area still appear to be largely online, so it may be that Wildanet’s power backup solution (if one exists) was not sufficient to cover the event (credits to one of our readers, Badger, for the extra feedback). We have contacted Wildanet for an update, although the National Grid doesn’t expect a resolution until 9am on Sunday (estimated). It’s unclear if any of the other service disruptions are related to power cuts.

Wildanet currently holds the following Project Gigabit broadband roll-out contracts for Cornwall Central (Lot 32.03) and South West (Lot 32.02) – both awarded in January 2023 (here) – and the Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly (Lot 32) contract – awarded in April 2024 (here). The three contracts combined are worth £77m and should help to extend gigabit-capable broadband to over 37,000 additional premises in the county.

Rural Broadband Altnet Truespeed in UK Merger Talks with Freedom Fibre | ISPreview UK

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Aviva-backed alternative gigabit broadband operator Truespeed, which has only just merged with County Broadband to create a single full fibre operator covering 177,000 premises (RFS) and 41,000 customers in England (here), is reportedly in talks with Freedom Fibre about the possibility of consolidating into an even larger network.

Just to recap. The newly merged Truespeed currently focuses upon serving rural premises in parts of Devon, Wiltshire, Somerset Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk with their new Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) network. But over the past couple of years they’ve also had to deal with the same challenges as many other altnets (i.e. rising build costs, high interest rates and growing competition) – resulting in some job cuts, a build slowdown and greater focus on commercialisation (here and here).

NOTE: Truespeed was funded by £175m from Aviva Investors, most of which has already been committed. County Broadband was similarly supported by an investment of £146m from Aviva, making the prior merger more predictable. Freedom Fibre is backed by investment from InfraBridge (DigitalBridge) and Equitix.

Much as ISPreview pointed out after Truespeed and Country Broadband confirmed their plans to merge in July 2025, the combined network is still relatively small in terms of premises passed and was thus likely to become a target for other consolidators in the future.

This brings us to Freedom Fibre, which has already done some consolidating of its own with the VX FIBER deal in 2023 (here). But they’ve since faced similar strains to Truespeed (here, here and here), which also included the need to scale-back and withdraw from some of the government’s Project Gigabit contracts.

Nevertheless, Freedom Fibre has so far built their own FTTP network to cover 350,000 premises (inc. 25,000 customers) across various parts of England and North Wales, albeit primarily parts of Cheshire, Greater Manchester, North Wales, Staffordshire, Suffolk, Essex and North Shropshire. Suffice to say that there’s no overbuild between Truespeed and Freedom Fibre, although they do come quite close in the northern part of Bristol.

According to Sky News, Truespeed and Freedom Fibre are now in discussions over the possibility of reaching a future merger agreement, which could in theory create a single full fibre network that covers around 530,000 premises and 66,000 customers. This would give the combined business a stronger position within the market, but further consolidation in the future still seems likely to help grow more scale.

At present these are just talks, and we don’t yet know whether they will result in a deal. Such an agreement would make sense, even if it does turn out to be another stepping stone toward an even bigger consolidation further down the line. Sky states that all of the parties declined to comment.

Broadband ISP KCOM Reveals Hull UK’s Internet Traffic Use Over Christmas | ISPreview UK

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Macquarie-backed telecoms provider KCOM, which have deployed their own full fibre broadband (FTTP) network across 305,000 premises in parts of East Yorkshire (primarily Hull) and Lincolnshire (England), has revealed that customers in the Hull area consumed 2,500,000 GigaBytes (GB) of data traffic on Christmas Day 2025 (500,000GB more than usual) – it’s “busiest day ever for online traffic“.

During the whole of Christmas week, KCOM said their broadband network carried a whopping 24.2 PebiBytes (PiB) of data (we aren’t sure why they’ve opted to use PiB instead of PetaBytes, but each to their own). During the same week, KCOM customers streamed 10.9 PiB with YouTube (2.3 PiB) and Netflix (2.2 PiB) proving the streaming services of choice as viewers logged on to watch Stranger Things and various other shows.

NOTE: 1 Pebibyte is equivalent to about 1,126,000 GigaBytes (GB) or 1,125 TeraBytes (TB) – not to be confused with data transfer speeds like Gigabits and Terabits.

Rounding out the Top Ten of the streaming services on KCOM’s network over Christmas were TikTok (0.9PiB), Sky Streaming [Sky Glass, Sky Stream] (0.9 PiB), Amazon Prime (0.6 PiB), BBC’s iPlayer (0.6 PiB) Disney+ (0.6 PiB), ITV Player (0.5 PiB) and Facebook video (0.5 PiB).

The biggest gaming console winners on Christmas Day were the Sony PS5 and Microsoft Xbox, with tens of thousands of users downloading new games and content updates. Gaming and related software updates accounted for 3.4PiB of data transfer, with 60% coming from KCOM’s unique local caches (i.e. popular data that gets stored closer to end-users in their network), making it a faster and more reliable download process for Hull users.

The biggest surges in data traffic came at 10am and 10pm on Christmas Day, with a lull coming at 2pm as families sat down to their Christmas dinner before tuning in to see the King’s Speech.

Richard Schäfer, KCOM CEO, said:

“It’s been a huge Christmas for streaming services across the KCOM region and the amount of data that families are using is truly astounding.

As the UK’s most reliable network*, our full fibre network dealt with the huge amount of surfing, streaming and gaming which enabled families to sit back and enjoy their Christmas specials, season finales and box sets seamlessly.”

The bumper Christmas period comes on the back of a steady growth in data traffic on KCOM’s full fibre network since September 2025. During that time, the ISP has seen a 15% increase in demand for data usage across its network.

South Yorkshire Celebrates Hitting 95 Percent Gigabit Broadband Coverage | ISPreview UK

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The South Yorkshire Digital Infrastructure Team, which primarily works under the South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority (SYMCA) to accelerate the rollout of fixed gigabit broadband (1000Mbps+) and 5G mobile networks, has today celebrated having surpassed their target of reaching 95% of homes and businesses in the region with gigabit lines.

The figure was officially achieved in early November 2025, thus besting the target that had been set in the South Yorkshire Digital Infrastructure Strategy, which aimed for 95% coverage by the end of 2025. The figure also exceeds the national UK coverage level for gigabit connectivity, which currently sits just shy of the 90% mark (here).

So far the vast majority of these coverage improvements have flowed from commercial deployments, such as via networks from Openreach, Virgin Media (inc. nexfibre), CityFibre, Netomnia (Brsk) and Pine Media etc. But the government’s prior Superfast Broadband (SFBB) programme also contributed some full fibre (FTTP) coverage, while the latest £5bn Project Gigabit scheme aims to extend gigabit broadband “nationwide” (c.99% of premises) by 2032 (here).

South Yorkshire’s Mayor, Oliver Coppard, said:

“These days getting online and staying connected isn’t a luxury; it’s vital. Whether we’re working from home, running a business or getting online for a doctor’s appointment, we all rely on a decent internet connection. That’s why we’ve been working to fix it and get more people across South Yorkshire than ever access to the fastest internet there is. It’s about building a fairer, more connected South Yorkshire that’s fit for the future.”

Ofcom currently predicts (here) that gigabit coverage will reach anywhere between 91% to 97% of the UK by January 2028.

London Internet Exchange Updates UK Fees and Service Structure for 2026 | ISPreview UK

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The member‑owned not-for-profit London Internet Exchange (LINX), which handles a large chunk of UK and global data traffic through their switches via around 900 members (broadband ISPs, mobile operators etc.), has today announced their new service profile and fees for 2026.

The 2026 update includes a few changes, such as the ability for networks to now consume 10Gbps of peering on a 100GE port, which should make the step-up to 100GE even easier. LINX have also increased the service bandwidth included in the monthly membership fee from 2Gbps to 4Gbps over a 10GE port.

The first service of up to 4Gbps will now also be included free of charge at each LINX operated location in the UK, US and Africa – “that’s 36Gbps of potential service included“. The services applicable include Peering, Microsoft Azure Peering Service, Private VLAN, or a Closed User Group.

Megan Atkins, CCO at LINX, said:

“We listen to the feedback from our members and monitor the changes in our industry to judge how best to increase value to the community.”

For many of our members, this enhancement offers a direct reduction in operational networking costs and a simplified path to expanding services.”

See the 2026 service fees here.

Ofcom Proceed with Proposal to Share Upper 6GHz Band for UK Mobile and WiFi | ISPreview UK

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The telecoms regulator, Ofcom, has this morning confirmed that the United Kingdom will become the “first country in Europe” to adopt a proposal that allows low power indoor WiFi signals and outdoor mobile broadband (4G, 5G etc.) networks to “share” access to the Upper 6GHz radio spectrum band (6425 to 7125MHz).

Ofcom has already made the Lower part (5925 to 6425MHz) of the 6GHz band available for WiFi, such as under the latest WiFi 6E and WiFi 7 standards (here), yet the Upper part has remained the subject of some debate. Mobile operators want to harness it (licensed) to deliver faster 5G and future 6G based data speeds, while others argue it should go toward licence-exempt consumer WiFi. Existing users of the band (e.g. fixed services, satellite, radio astronomy etc.) have also expressed concerns over the risks from interference.

NOTE: The consultation also proposes to allow outdoor and higher power WiFi to operate within the Lower 6GHz band (WiFi in this band is currently limited to low power indoor use only), under the control of an Automated Frequency Coordination (AFC) database to protect other users from interference. This could improve WiFi cover for sports stadiums, factories and hospitals etc.

Suffice to say, both sides of the debate have been able to field strong arguments. However, rather than pick a side, Ofcom has instead spent the past few years exploring the middle-ground option of “hybrid sharing” (details). This could potentially enable, with some performance caveats (i.e. co-existence without causing interference is a challenge), the use of both Wi-Fi and mobile in the same Upper 6GHz band.

Ofcom-6GHz-Upper-and-Lower-UK-Band-Changes

Ofcom’s approach works by dividing up the upper 6GHz band, with Wi-Fi prioritised in one part and mobile in the other, with clear technical conditions and controls attached to limit the risks from interference. The new consultation finalises the regulator’s proposals, although implementation will be a slow process.

David Willis, Ofcom’s Group Director for Spectrum, said:

“Today’s announcements reaffirm the UK’s position as a leader in Europe in getting the most out of the airwaves we all rely on.

Sharing Upper 6 GHz would be a win for businesses and homes across the country who want both better Wi-Fi and mobile networks that are fit for the future. And our decision on lower 6 GHz will boost broadband services across the UK.

Our plans open the doors to further economic growth and investment, while supporting the delivery of crucial innovations like 6G in the future.”

What Ofcom have decided – in brief

• We will authorise, under a licence exemption, use of outdoor and higher power Wi-Fi devices (up to 36 dBm EIRP) in the Lower 6 GHz band (5925–6425 MHz) provided they are under the control of an AFC system.

• As a result, we will require implementation of an AFC system by third parties. We are separately consulting on the details necessary to implement that AFC system.

• Whilst we are consulting further on approaches to enable Wi-Fi in the Upper 6 GHz band (6425–7125 MHz), we will proceed with making low power Wi-Fi client devices available across the Upper 6 GHz band, provided they are connected to an authorised Access Point (“AP”, for example a Wi-Fi router). This decision should allow client devices to be made available for possible future use of the band, thereby helping faster adoption. Use in the band, in practice, will only become possible once we have made a decision on the proposals below to enable Access Points in Upper 6 GHz.

• We will adopt a sub-national licencing approach for mobile in the Upper 6 GHz band in the “mobile priority” portion of the band. We intend to award mobile licences in “high density” areas of the UK and expect to implement a local licensing arrangement (for example, on a first come, first served basis) outside of these high density areas. We will consult further on the specifics of this in spring 2026.

What Ofcom are proposing – in brief

• To implement prioritised spectrum sharing in the Upper 6 GHz band, with:

A “Wi-Fi- priority” portion in the bottom 160 MHz of the band (6425–6585 MHz).

A “mobile priority” portion in the upper 540 MHz (6585–7125 MHz).

• To make the Wi-Fi priority portion available on the same basis as spectrum in the Lower 6 GHz band. This includes indoor and very lower power Wi-Fi, and also outdoor and higher power Wi-Fi provided this is under the control of an AFC system.

• To enable early access for Wi-Fi in the mobile priority portion of Upper 6 GHz. In response to feedback from the February 2025 consultation, we propose to only allow this access for Wi-Fi which is under the control of an AFC system. This will ensure that we can clear Wi-Fi out of the way, in the locations and channels where mobile deploys later on.

Fully implementing all of this is clearly going to take some time, particularly when it comes to the mobile (4G, 5G and 6G) side of things. Ofcom’s approach is partly being linked to wider European efforts to harmonise use of the same band via a similar policy (expected in 2028). But in any case, the regulator doesn’t anticipate hardware support in mobile equipment until around 2030.

On the WiFi front, the need for a new AFC database will also slow down the implementation a bit. AFC works by automatically identifying frequencies that can be used by Wi-Fi without impacting existing services, therefore keeping the administrative burden of spectrum management low. The AFC system is currently in use in this band in the US and Canada, and is under consideration in other countries.

Depending upon your perspective, Ofcom’s approach may seem like either a good or bad move, since neither mobile nor WiFi will be able to fully benefit from the Upper 6GHz band in every location. But we’ll need to see how much of an impact it has in the real-world before really being able to judge.