Login Menu

Compare Fibre Broadband Deals

See the fibre packages available at your address – part fibre and full fibre, side by side.

?
Select your current provider
Compare Fibre Broadband Deals

Search and compare deals from over 15 broadband providers, including


‘Fibre’ broadband comes in two forms. Part fibre (FTTC) runs a fibre line to a street cabinet and then copper to your home; full fibre (FTTP) runs fibre all the way in. Full fibre is faster and steadier, while part fibre reaches more homes. Part fibre is often cheaper too, but not always – a new full-fibre deal can undercut an older part-fibre one. Quotezone compares fibre broadband from 15+ UK providers, so you can see what’s available at your postcode and pick the right type for you.

What is fibre broadband?

It sends your connection down a fibre-optic line instead of old copper phone wires. How far that fibre runs is what separates the two types.

Part fibre (FTTC)

Fibre to a street cabinet, then copper for the last stretch. Widely available and often cheaper – though a new full-fibre deal can sometimes cost less. Speeds drop the further you live from the cabinet.

Full fibre (FTTP)

Fibre all the way into your home, with no copper to slow it down. The fastest, most reliable type – read more on full fibre broadband.

Part fibre vs full fibre: the difference

Both are ‘fibre’, but only full fibre runs fibre to your door. That single difference drives the speed, reliability and price gap.

Speed

Part fibre typically tops out lower and varies by distance from the cabinet; full fibre holds the same speed whatever the distance.

Reliability

With no copper in the line, full fibre is less affected by distance and interference, so it tends to be steadier.

Availability and price

Part fibre reaches almost every home, while full fibre is expanding fast. On price they’re often close at entry level – and a full-fibre deal can sometimes cost less than older part fibre.

How fast is fibre?

The right speed depends on how many people and devices use your connection at once, not just the headline figure.

Part fibre (FTTC)

Usually lands in the tens of Mbps, depending on how far you are from the cabinet – fine for browsing, streaming and a couple of users.

Full fibre (FTTP)

Packages commonly run from around 100Mbps to 1Gbps, often with symmetrical uploads, for busy households and heavy use.

The speed you actually get

Providers quote the speed you’re likely to get at peak times (8pm–10pm). If you consistently don’t get it, you can leave your contract (Ofcom).

Is fibre available in my area?

A postcode check is the only reliable way to see which types of fibre reach your home.

Part fibre is almost everywhere

FTTC reaches the vast majority of UK homes through the Openreach network (Openreach).

Full fibre is catching up fast

Full fibre already reaches a large and growing share of homes, and networks are still building. Coverage varies street by street.

Check your exact address

Enter your postcode, then add your address – Quotezone shows the fibre packages that can actually be installed where you live.

Why the UK is switching from copper to fibre

Full fibre is no longer a minority option. As of January 2026 it reached 82% of UK homes – 24.9 million premises – up from 78% a year earlier (Ofcom Connected Nations). Gigabit-capable broadband, which includes full fibre and cable, now reaches 89% of homes.

One big reason is the end of the old copper phone network. The analogue network (PSTN) is due to be switched off in January 2027, and landlines are moving to digital lines that run over broadband (Openreach). For most households full fibre is quickly becoming the default choice, so it’s worth checking what can be installed at your address before your current deal ends.

Which providers offer fibre?

Most major providers sell fibre, though which ones reach your street depends on the networks built in your area. Enter your postcode to see the full list.

National providers

BT, Sky, Vodafone, NOW and Virgin Media sell fibre across much of the UK – full fibre where it’s available, part fibre where it isn’t yet.

Full-fibre specialists

Community Fibre (London), YouFibre, BeFibre and Zzoomm are full-fibre only and can be very competitive where they reach.

How much does fibre cost?

Fibre doesn’t have to be expensive. Depending on what’s available at your address, deals can start at under £20 a month – faster full-fibre tiers cost more.

Type and speed

Part fibre is sometimes the cheapest; entry-level full fibre is often priced close to it, and can even undercut an older part-fibre deal. The fastest gigabit tiers cost more.

Contract length

Longer contracts (often 18–24 months) tend to carry a lower monthly price than shorter ones.

Offers and price rises

Gift cards, vouchers and any in-contract price rise are shown up front – most providers now state the rise as a set amount before you sign up (Ofcom).

Part fibre or full fibre – which should you choose?

There’s no single ‘best’ type – match it to your household, your budget and what’s available where you live.

Choose part fibre if

Full fibre hasn’t reached your street yet, or your household is light-to-moderate online and part fibre works out cheaper for you.

Choose full fibre if

Several people stream, game or work from home at once, you want the steadiest connection, or you’re ready to move off copper – see full fibre broadband.

Plan to upgrade

If only part fibre is available now, a postcode check will show full fibre the moment it reaches you, as the old copper network is retired over time.

A real-world example

Matching the type and speed to how the household actually uses the internet beats paying for the fastest tier going.

The problem

A couple working from home found their part-fibre line slowed in the evenings, and video calls stuttered when both were online.

The fix

A postcode check showed full fibre had just reached their street. They switched to a mid-range full-fibre package – fast enough for both, without paying for the top gigabit tier.

You might also need

Setting up a new connection is a good moment to protect the kit that relies on it.

Gadget insurance

Cover your router, laptops and devices against damage and theft – compare gadget insurance.

Home contents insurance

Protect the tech and contents in your home – compare home contents insurance.

Fibre broadband FAQs

What is fibre broadband?

It uses a fibre-optic line instead of old copper phone wires. There are two types: part fibre (FTTC), where fibre runs to a street cabinet and copper covers the last stretch, and full fibre (FTTP), where fibre runs all the way into your home.

Is full fibre better than part fibre?

For most households, yes. Full fibre keeps the same speed whatever the distance to the cabinet and tends to be more reliable, because there’s no copper in the line. Part fibre reaches more homes and is often cheaper, though a new full-fibre deal can undercut an older part-fibre one, and its speeds fall the further you are from the cabinet.

How much does fibre cost?

Part fibre is sometimes the cheapest option, but not always – a new full-fibre deal can cost less than an older part-fibre one. Entry-level full fibre is often priced close to part fibre. Depending on what’s available at your address, deals can start at under £20 a month, with faster tiers costing more. Quotezone shows the monthly price, full contract cost and any setup fees so you can compare the true cost.

How fast is fibre?

Part fibre usually lands in the tens of Mbps, depending on distance from the cabinet. Full fibre commonly runs from around 100Mbps to 1Gbps, often with symmetrical upload speeds. Providers quote the speed you’re likely to get at peak times.

Is fibre available in my area?

Part fibre reaches the vast majority of UK homes, and full fibre reaches a large and growing share. Coverage varies street by street, so a postcode check is the only reliable way to know. Enter your postcode on Quotezone to see what’s available at your address.

What’s the difference between FTTC and FTTP?

FTTC (fibre to the cabinet) is part fibre – fibre to a street cabinet, then copper to your home. FTTP (fibre to the premises) is full fibre – fibre all the way in. FTTP is faster and steadier; FTTC is more widely available and often cheaper, though a new FTTP deal can sometimes cost less.

Do I need a new router for fibre?

Most providers supply a suitable router when you sign up. Moving from part fibre to full fibre usually means a new router, because full fibre connects through a different box fitted to your wall.

How do I switch fibre provider?

Choose a deal on Quotezone and click through to the provider. Completing your purchase starts the move under One Touch Switching, so your new provider arranges the switch and closes your old service. A new full-fibre line may need a short engineer visit.

Ready to find a faster, better-value connection?

Piers Murray

Reviewed by: Piers Murray
Broadband & Mobile Expert

Written by: Katie Gawley
Insurance Content Writer

Fact-checked by: Quotezone Editorial Team

This content follows our Editorial Guidelines

Last Updated: June 2026