Ofcom has published their annual Connection Nations 2024 digital infrastructure report, which among many other things finds that residential gigabit-capable broadband ISP networks now cover 84% of the UK (up from 78% in 2023), while outdoor 5G mobile cover from at least one operator is available to 90-95% of premises (up from 85-93%). But rural cover remains poor.
The latest CN2024 report typically offers a general overview of fixed line broadband and mobile network availability, as well as related service take-up and data usage from across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which is largely based off data that was gathered during July and September 2024 (varying between the results).
Before we begin, it’s important to note how Ofcom defines the different broadband performance classes. For example, “Decent Broadband” means a 10Mbps+ download speed with 1Mbps+ uploads (i.e. the Universal Service Obligation), while “Superfast” is 30Mbps+, “Gigabit” equates to 1Gbps+ (1000Mbps+) and “Full Fibre” essentially means a pure Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP/B) network (these are also gigabit capableand faster).
As usual, we’ve split our summary of the key results from this report into categories for fixed line broadband and mobile networks.
Fixed Line Broadband Coverage
The rapid deployment of “full fibre” broadband networks by various providers continues to be the main area of growth and change during 2024 (Summary of UK Full Fibre Build Progress), which predominantly reflects the efforts of commercial investment in urban areas. But that is starting to change due to the Government’s £5bn state aid funded Project Gigabit programme.
The project, which originally aimed to make gigabit speeds available to at least 85% of UK premises by the end of 2025 (this was recently achieved) and to hit “nationwide” (c.99%) coverage by 2030 (here), is slowly starting to convert early contract awards into tangible build activity across various rural areas. Admittedly, its impact is still modest, but it’s growing.
Overall, the picture today is that the UK’s “full fibre” network coverage has risen from 10% in 2019 (3 million premises), then 18% (5.1m) in 2020, 28% (8.2m) in 2021, 42% (12.4m) in 2022, 57% (17.1m) in 2023 and now stands at 69% (20.7m). Meanwhile, “gigabit” coverage, which is driven by both FTTP and Virgin Media’s HFC (cable) network, has grown from 78% (23.2m) last year to 84% now (25m) – there’s a lot of urban overbuild between the two technologies.
Elsewhere, “superfast” coverage has risen to 98% or 29.4m premises (up from 97% and 29.1m last year), which falls to 89% in rural areas (up from 88%). But the number of premises that cannot get a “decent broadband” service is 0.2% or 58,000 premises (down from 0.2% and 61,000 last year). But this is only true if you include 4G and fixed wireless coverage into the figure, yet if you just looked at fixed line solutions then it would be closer to 1% (385,000 premises), which is down from 410,000 premises last year.
Sadly, many of those that remain in sub-10Mbps areas are often too expensive for even the USO to fix (here and here), but the gap is expected to fall. Ofcom predicts that the number of premises unable to get 10Mbps (decent) broadband could fall to around 48,000 by December 2025, mostly as a result of upgrades via publicly funded schemes (connection vouchers, project gigabit contracts etc.).
Ofcom also provides some useful data on the rural vs urban coverage split for superfast, decent broadband, full fibre and gigabit lines below – split by region.
In terms of take-up, some 75% (up from 72%) that are able to get a “superfast broadband” service actually take it (this will formally trigger a review of USO speeds), while 35% or 7.5 million premises have taken a “full fibre” network (up from 28% last year). But it’s also noted that 52% of premises in rural areas have taken full fibre, compared to 32% in urban area. However, we’ve yet to find a take-up figure for gigabit-capable networks in the new report, which is a bit odd (last year it was 42%).
Elsewhere, the average monthly data usage per connection is now 531GB (GigaBytes) per connection across “all technologies“, which rises to an average of 766GB for full-fibre connections only. This is a bit of a different methodology from last year, and so we can’t compare. Sadly, the regulator doesn’t provide a similar figure for mobile networks, but it’s usually a lot less.
Natalie Black, Ofcom’s Networks and Communications Group Director, said:
“It’s a record-breaking year for broadband in the UK, as the roll out of full fibre continues to steam ahead.
Whether you’re running a business, streaming your favourite programmes, or doing Christmas shopping online, it’s more likely than ever that you’ll be able to benefit from a fast and reliable broadband connection.”
The regulator’s report also includes a few other interesting details. For example, legacy voice / phone (PSTN) connections now account for just 27% of all landline connections as consumers move to either a broadband-only home or digital voice / VoIP style solutions (down from 41% last year). Most PSTN and related Wholesale Line Rental services are due to be switched off by December 2025, but vulnerable users have until 31st January 2027.
In addition, there are also resilience risks associated with legacy technologies and extreme weather events. For example, this year saw a 45% rise in the number of PSTN incidents reported to Ofcom, although there was a 55% decrease in the number of PSTN service hours lost. On extreme weather incidents, the number of outages fell during the 2023/24 storm season, but certain events such as Storms Isha and Jocelyn caused significant impacts.
In total, fixed network incident reports increased substantially from 600 in 2023 to 910 in 2024, while mobile network resilience incidents reported to Ofcom increased from 609 in 2023 to 696 in 2024.
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