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Britain sets rules for final phase of fibre broadband roll-out

By Thomson Reuters Mar 17, 2026 | 2:28 AM

LONDON, March 17 (Reuters) – Britain said on Tuesday it would regulate BT Openreach’s national broadband network for ​another five years, with a ‌price cap on a wider range of speeds, to drive competition and extend fibre connections to the final fifth of the ‌country’s ​premises.

The competitive framework ⁠put in place by ⁠watchdog Ofcom in 2021 has resulted in nearly eight in 10 homes having access to full-fibre broadband, ​up from less than a quarter fives years, in a rapid ⁠turnaround.

Around three quarters have ⁠a choice of two providers – ​generally Openreach and Virgin Media or ​an alternative smaller network – but Ofcom said ‌Openreach still retained significant market power and it could not remove regulation entirely.

It said it would cap ⁠the nominal price that Openreach can charge retail providers like Vodafone or Sky – who lease ⁠its ‌infrastructure – for download speeds up ⁠to 80Mbit/s, rather than 40Mbit/s ​at ‌present.

The prices of higher-speed ​products will ⁠remain unregulated, so providers had an incentive to invest in networks that can deliver faster speeds, it said on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Paul Sandle; Editing by ​Kate Holton)