Rural broadband

Rural broadband.
More options than you might think.

From government-funded full fibre and 4G home broadband to Starlink satellite, rural internet in the UK has improved dramatically. Here is what is actually available and what is genuinely worth it.

Fibre rollout expanding 4G home broadband Starlink from £55/month Government vouchers available
Quick answer

Broadband in rural areas has expanded significantly in the past few years. Full fibre is reaching more rural areas through Project Gigabit, the government's programme to connect underserved locations. Where fixed-line options remain slow, 4G home broadband is viable if you have reasonable mobile signal, and Starlink satellite now provides fast internet almost anywhere with a clear sky view. The right option depends entirely on your specific location. Check your postcode to see what fixed-line options have reached your address before defaulting to wireless or satellite alternatives.

Check what broadband is available at your address

Broadband in rural areas varies enormously by location, even between neighbouring properties. Even properties a few hundred metres apart can have very different options. Check by postcode to see what is genuinely available where you live.

Check my postcode
Your options

Rural broadband options explained honestly

Full fibre broadband (FTTP)

Where available via Openreach or altnet rollout
Best if available

If full fibre has reached your address through the commercial or government-funded rollout, it is by far the best option. Fast, reliable, low latency, and competitively priced now that more providers are competing in rural areas. Check your postcode as coverage is expanding rapidly and many areas that had nothing two years ago now have options.

Typical speed 100Mb to 1Gb
Monthly cost ~£28 to £45
Installation Engineer visit required

4G home broadband

Three, EE, Vodafone home router products
Good where signal exists

Uses the 4G mobile network to deliver broadband via a home router with a SIM card. No installation required, the router plugs into a power socket. Where 4G signal is decent, speeds of 20 to 80Mb are achievable. External antenna options can significantly boost signal in weaker rural locations. Variable in areas with poor or inconsistent 4G coverage.

Typical speed 20 to 80Mb
Monthly cost ~£20 to £35
Installation None, plug in and go

Starlink satellite broadband

SpaceX low-earth orbit satellite network
Best for remote locations

Starlink delivers fast satellite internet almost anywhere with a clear view of the sky. Unlike older geostationary satellites, Starlink uses low-earth orbit satellites which give much lower latency, typically 20 to 40ms rather than 600ms plus. A genuine game-changer for remote rural properties with no realistic fixed-line or mobile alternative.

Typical speed 50 to 200Mb
Monthly cost ~£55 to £75
Hardware cost ~£299 upfront

Fixed wireless access

Specialist rural providers with local transmitters
Area specific

Some specialist rural providers install a small antenna on your property to receive a signal from a nearby transmitter. Coverage is very location-specific and varies significantly. Can be a good option in areas where one of these providers has built their network. Worth checking whether any operate in your area.

Typical speed 10 to 50Mb
Monthly cost Varies by provider
Installation Antenna on property
Starlink explained

Is Starlink actually worth it for rural homes?

Starlink is worth it for rural homes where the realistic alternatives are slow ADSL of under 10Mb, unreliable 4G signal, or nothing at all. At £55 to £75 per month it costs more than standard broadband, but for homes where 50 to 200Mb was previously impossible, the improvement in day-to-day usability is enormous. Working from home, video calls, streaming, and gaming become viable where they were not before.

The main considerations are the upfront hardware cost of around £299, the need for a clear unobstructed view of the sky with no significant tree or building interference, and slightly variable performance during periods of high demand or adverse weather. The monthly rolling contract means you can cancel if something better becomes available, which makes trialling it relatively low risk.

Government support

Government schemes that could help pay for rural broadband

The UK government has invested significantly in improving rural broadband through several schemes. If you are in an underserved area it is worth checking whether any of these apply to you before paying full price for a private solution.

Project Gigabit

The government's flagship programme funding full fibre rollout to rural and underserved areas that would not otherwise receive commercial investment. Contracts are awarded to providers to build networks in specific areas. Check Ofcom's coverage tool or ask your local council whether your area is included in a Project Gigabit contract.

Free connection

Gigabit Voucher Scheme

Vouchers for eligible rural homes and businesses towards the cost of installing gigabit-capable broadband. Individual residences can claim up to £4,500 and businesses up to £3,500. Groups of properties can combine vouchers for a larger shared installation. Eligibility depends on your current broadband speed and location.

Up to £4,500

Local authority and devolved nation schemes

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each have their own broadband improvement programmes alongside UK-wide schemes. Some English local authorities also run supplementary programmes. Check with your local council for area-specific initiatives that may not be widely advertised nationally.

Varies by area
Side by side

Rural broadband options compared

Option Typical speed Monthly cost No installation? Availability
Full fibre FTTP 100Mb to 1Gb £28 to £45 No, engineer needed Expanding in rural areas
4G home broadband 20 to 80Mb £20 to £35 Yes, plug in and go Where 4G signal exists
Starlink satellite 50 to 200Mb £55 to £75 Dish setup required Almost anywhere
Fixed wireless 10 to 50Mb Varies Antenna on property Specific provider areas
ADSL (legacy) Up to 17Mb £20 to £35 Phone line needed Most addresses, but slow
Honest view

The rural broadband landscape in 2026, the honest picture

Worth knowing

Rural broadband in the UK is genuinely improving faster than most people in affected areas realise. The combination of Project Gigabit funded rollouts, competitive alternative network builders, expanded 4G and 5G mobile coverage, and Starlink means that the proportion of rural homes with no viable fast internet option has decreased significantly in the last two or three years. If you last checked your options more than 18 months ago, it is worth checking again. The picture changes quickly and addresses that had nothing reasonable available previously often find new options now.

The most important first step is always to check your specific address by postcode rather than assuming what applies to your area in general. Coverage is granular and varies street by street in some cases. Our comparison tool checks against current provider coverage data to show you what is actually available at your property today.

If fixed-line options are not yet available and you are relying on slow ADSL or nothing, the choice is usually between 4G home broadband if you have signal and Starlink if you do not. Both are vastly better than typical rural ADSL. 4G is cheaper and simpler if signal is adequate. Starlink is more consistent and faster but costs more upfront and per month. Use our comparison tool to check what is available at your postcode right now.


FAQ

Questions people ask

Full fibre where the rollout has reached your area, 4G home broadband using mobile signal, Starlink satellite internet which works almost anywhere with a clear sky view, fixed wireless access from specialist rural providers, and standard ADSL on the copper phone network. The best option depends on your specific location and what is available there.

For rural homes with no realistic fast broadband alternative, yes. Starlink delivers 50 to 200Mb where slow ADSL or poor 4G signal was the only previous option. The upfront hardware cost is around £299 and monthly plans start from around £55. The monthly rolling contract means you can cancel if something better becomes available.

If you have reasonable 4G signal, yes. Three, EE, and Vodafone all offer dedicated 4G home broadband products. External antenna options can boost signal in weaker areas. Check coverage maps for each network at your specific address before signing up as rural coverage varies considerably between networks.

Depends on your location and which schemes cover you. Project Gigabit is the main government programme funding rural full fibre and is actively building in many areas. Check with your local council or Ofcom's connected nations data for planned timelines in your area. Many areas that were years away from fibre two years ago now have confirmed build dates.

A government programme providing vouchers up to £4,500 for eligible rural homes towards the cost of installing gigabit-capable broadband. Businesses can receive up to £3,500. Groups of properties can combine vouchers for a larger shared installation. Eligibility depends on your current broadband speed and location.


Check what broadband is available at your address

Rural availability changes faster than most people realise. Check your postcode today to see what has reached your area.

Check my postcode