Phone and internet bundles, which actually save money.
An honest Australian guide to combining phone and internet on one bill. Which providers offer real discounts, which just put two services on one statement, and when picking the best of each separately beats bundling entirely.
Phone and internet bundles in Australia work in two ways: mobile plus NBN, or home phone landline plus NBN. The honest reality is that the two biggest carriers (Telstra and Optus) don't offer mobile-and-internet bundle discounts at all, while Vodafone gives up to $15 per month off NBN and Aussie Broadband saves $5 per month per mobile line (max $25). For most households, picking the cheapest standalone mobile plus the cheapest standalone NBN beats bundling on price. Bundling makes sense for one-bill convenience or when you're already with a discounting provider.
Telstra and Optus don't actually bundle
Most Australians assume that the country's two biggest telecommunications providers offer mobile-and-internet bundle discounts, because every other industry rewards loyalty across multiple services. The reality is that neither Telstra nor Optus offers a real bundling discount on combining mobile and NBN in 2026. Knowing this changes the bundle calculation entirely.
Where the discount actually exists
You can have a Telstra mobile and a Telstra NBN on the same account, but you'll pay the standard advertised price for each. Same with Optus. No combined discount, no bundle saving. Real bundling discounts come from the second-tier providers competing on price.
No bundle discount
Standalone pricing for both mobile and NBN regardless of whether they're on the same account. Compensation: Telstra's NBN plans automatically include a home phone landline with unlimited local and national calls (worth ~$10/mo elsewhere).
No mobile + NBN discount
Both services available, both at standard pricing. Optus does let you share data across multiple lines on the same account, and bundle data SIMs with mobile plans, but no combined mobile and home internet discount.
Up to $15/mo off NBN
Real discounts. Existing postpaid mobile customers get $15/mo off NBN, $10/mo off 4G home internet, or $5/mo off 5G home internet. The most generous bundle play in the AU market in 2026.
$5 off per mobile line
Best for families. Each 5G mobile plan on the same account as Aussie Broadband home internet saves $5/mo, up to a maximum of $25/mo for five lines. Big saving for multi-person households.
Mobile plus NBN, or home phone plus NBN
"Phone and internet bundle" means two different things in Australia. Most search traffic looks for mobile phone plus home internet, but there's also a smaller market for home phone landline (VoIP) plus NBN. They're built differently and use different providers.
Mobile + NBN
Mobile phone plan combined with home internet on the same account. The most common bundle search intent in 2026, with most providers offering at least one such combination. Real discounts only from select carriers though.
- Vodafone $15/mo off NBN for postpaid mobile customers
- Aussie Broadband $5 off per mobile line, max $25/mo
- TPG, iiNet, Amaysim Various smaller discounts $5-$10/mo
- Telstra and Optus No bundle discount, just one bill
Home Phone + NBN
Landline phone bundled with home internet. Most "home phones" in 2026 are VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) running over your NBN connection rather than copper phone lines. Smaller market but still relevant for older households or business landlines.
- Telstra NBN Includes home phone with unlimited local/national calls free
- MATE NBN Add VoIP home phone for $9/mo extra
- AGL NBN Add home phone $10/mo (can also bundle with energy)
- Optus NBN Various call pack add-ons available
Every Australian provider's bundle discount in 2026
Here's the honest breakdown of which Australian providers actually discount mobile and NBN when bundled, ranked by maximum monthly saving. Many "bundles" deliver no real saving at all, just billing convenience.
Provider bundle offers as of May 2026. Discounts change periodically and may require specific plan tiers, contract terms, or existing customer status. Always verify current offers before signing up. Pricing for combined services is what matters, not just the headline discount.
The honest decision framework
Bundling is right for some households and wrong for others. The honest test is whether the combined cost of bundled services is less than picking the cheapest standalone option for each. Run through the two paths below to see which fits your situation.
Two paths, one honest answer
Run the maths both ways before committing. The right choice depends on whether you're optimising for absolute lowest cost or for convenience. Here's how to decide.
Pick bundling if any of these apply
You're already a Vodafone or Aussie Broadband customer. Adding the second service captures the discount automatically. You value one bill over absolute lowest cost. $10-$15/mo extra is worth the admin simplicity. You have multiple mobile lines. Aussie Broadband's per-line discount stacks up to $25/mo for families.
Pick separately if any of these apply
You want the absolute cheapest combined cost. Budget mobile (e.g. $20/mo) + budget NBN (e.g. $54/mo intro) at $74/mo total typically beats any bundle. You want flexibility to switch either service. Bundled accounts can complicate switching one service while keeping the other. You use Telstra or Optus for mobile. No bundle discount anyway, so no benefit to combining.
Six rules for buying phone and internet bundles
- Verify the actual discount, not the implied savings. Many "bundle" deals are just two services on one bill with no discount at all. Telstra and Optus market multi-service customers but charge full price for each. Always confirm the specific monthly saving in writing before assuming the bundle saves money.
- Compare the bundle to "best mobile + best NBN" separately. Don't compare the bundle to the same provider's standalone offering. Compare it to the cheapest standalone mobile plus the cheapest standalone NBN you could get elsewhere. The bundle wins less often than expected because budget NBN providers (Tangerine, Dodo, Spintel) undercut bundle pricing significantly.
- Bundling locks both services to one provider. If you want to switch your NBN to a faster or cheaper provider but stay with your bundled mobile, you'll usually lose the bundle discount. The flexibility cost matters when shopping deals every 6-12 months.
- Multi-line households should look at Aussie Broadband. If your household has 3+ mobile lines plus NBN, Aussie Broadband's $5-per-line stacking discount becomes meaningful ($15-$25/mo for families of 3-5). For single-mobile-line households, Vodafone's flat $15/mo NBN discount typically wins.
- Watch for intro pricing on bundled services. Bundle discounts are often applied on top of intro pricing that increases after 6 months. Calculate the bundled cost both intro and ongoing, not just the first-month total. A bundle that's cheaper in month 1 may not be cheapest in year 1.
- Home phone landline only matters if you actually use one. Telstra includes home phone calls automatically with NBN as a built-in bundle. If you don't make landline calls (most households under 60 don't), this "bundle benefit" is worth nothing. Compare bundles based on services you'll actually use.
Common questions about phone and internet bundles
What is a phone and internet bundle in Australia?
Do Telstra and Optus offer mobile and internet bundle discounts?
Which Australian providers offer the best phone and internet bundle discounts?
How much can I save by bundling phone and internet in Australia?
Is it cheaper to bundle phone and internet or buy them separately?
Can I add a home phone landline to my NBN plan in Australia?
Are phone and internet bundles worth it for one-bill convenience?
Can I bundle energy with phone and internet in Australia?
Ready to compare NBN providers?
Before committing to a bundle, see what the best standalone NBN plans cost. If the bundle still wins, sign up. If not, you've just saved real money.
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