Best Broadband Deals: Cut the Cost, Keep the Speed
Let’s be honest — no one wants to overpay for broadband deals, especially when half the time you’re just trying to stream Netflix without buffering like it’s 2009. Whether you’re gaming, doom-scrolling, or pretending to work on Zoom, your internet needs to keep up without nuking your bank account.
So, what are the best broadband deals right now? We’ve scouted the major UK providers (sorry, US folks — different beast), cut through the fake discounts, and picked out the offers actually worth your time.
1. Vodafone Broadband — Fast, Cheap, and Surprisingly Reliable

- Deal: Full Fibre 150 for £28/month
- Speed: Avg 150 Mbps
- Extras: Free router, no activation fee, 24-month contract
- Why it’s good: No fluff. It’s fast enough for streaming in 4K, gaming without lag, and it doesn’t cost stupid money.
Vodafone isn’t just the company you forgot had broadband — they’re actually killing it right now in the fibre market. Their packages are priced like entry-level deals but run on Openreach’s full fibre network. If you’re in a fibre area, this one’s hard to beat.
2. BT — Big Brand, Bigger Perks
- Deal: Full Fibre 100 for £29.99/month
- Speed: Avg 150 Mbps
- Extras: £50 BT Reward Card, free Smart Hub 2
- Why it’s good: BT is still king for nationwide coverage, and if you’re after solid customer service (or at least a company that picks up the phone), this is a safe bet.
The Reward Card knocks a fiver off your monthly cost if you look at it over the first year, and their Smart Hub 2 is genuinely good — not some crusty grey box from the router graveyard.
3. Virgin Media — When Speed is Life
- Deal: M250 Fibre Broadband for £26/month for 6 months, then £44
- Speed: Avg 264 Mbps
- Extras: No phone line needed, price lock options
- Why it’s good: You want speed? You’ve got it. Virgin runs on its own cable network and consistently delivers higher speeds than Openreach providers.
Yes, the price jumps after 6 months, but even with the bump, it’s competitive if you need serious bandwidth. Stream, game, run your side hustle — whatever — this package keeps up.
4. Sky — Good Midground, Great Bundles

- Deal: Superfast Broadband for £26/month
- Speed: Avg 61 Mbps
- Extras: Free line rental, option to add Sky TV cheaply
- Why it’s good: Sky’s speeds are solid for most users, and if you’re planning to bundle with TV, the total cost is usually lower than you’d expect.
This is the “I want decent broadband and I don’t want to think about it again for 18 months” deal. It just works — and the service is pretty smooth.
5. TalkTalk — Budget-Friendly, Less Frills
- Deal: Fibre 150 for £29.95/month
- Speed: Avg 152 Mbps
- Extras: No setup fee, fixed price for 24 months
- Why it’s good: It’s basically Vodafone’s deal with a different badge. Reliable speeds, predictable billing.
TalkTalk’s customer service has had… a reputation. But lately, it’s improved, and the value is solid. Great for students or anyone who just needs fast broadband without upselling.
Honorable Mentions:
- Hyperoptic: Only in some cities, but if you’re lucky enough to be in range, you can get 1Gbps for under £30.
- Now Broadband: Solid no-contract option — great if you’re renting or planning to move.
- Community Fibre: London-only, but the prices are wild (900 Mbps for £25?!).
Broadband deals change more often than Elon tweets, so always check for the latest offers and postcode availability. Most providers throw in incentives like reward cards, free months, or routers that don’t look like leftover Soviet hardware — but the real trick is comparing total costs over the contract.
Don’t get dazzled by month-one discounts. Check the full term cost, see what the exit fees are, and make sure the speed is what you actually get at your address.
And for the love of Wi-Fi, don’t fall for “up to” speeds. If the fine print says “up to 900 Mbps” but you live in a sleepy village where BT still delivers internet via pigeons, maybe dial it down a bit.
Got a postcode and want the real best deal for your house? Drop it in a broadband comparison site. Or shout at me in the comments. Either works.
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