Broadband with no contract.
Is it actually worth paying more?
The honest answer depends entirely on your situation. Here is the full picture including real numbers, what to watch out for, and how to find the best rolling plan at your address.
No contract broadband costs typically £3 to £10 more per month than a fixed-term deal. Over two years on a 24-month contract, that monthly saving adds up to between £144 and £216. But leave that contract 12 months early and your exit fee is likely £150 to £300. If you rent, move regularly, or have any genuine uncertainty about where you will be living in the next 12 to 18 months, the rolling plan almost always works out cheaper overall. If you own your home and are settled, the fixed term saves real money.
Compare no contract broadband at your address
Availability and pricing of rolling plans varies by postcode. Our comparison tool shows every no-contract deal available where you live, with speeds and pricing side by side.
Find deals at my postcodeWhat no contract broadband actually costs versus fixed term
Most comparison pages say rolling plans are "slightly more expensive" without actually showing you what that means in pounds. Here is what the difference typically looks like across common UK broadband tiers in 2026. These are representative figures based on typical market pricing, actual deals vary by provider and address.
Rolling plan vs 24-month contract, typical UK pricing 2026
Rolling typically £28 to £35/month. 24-month contract typically £22 to £28/month.
Rolling typically £33 to £40/month. 24-month contract typically £26 to £32/month.
Rolling typically £38 to £48/month. 24-month contract typically £28 to £38/month.
Exit fee typically equals remaining months billed at contracted rate.
How long you need to stay on the fixed contract for the savings to outweigh the risk of exit fees.
The maths is clear once you see it laid out. The monthly saving on a fixed contract is real but relatively modest. The exit fee risk on the same contract is significant. For anyone whose living situation has any real uncertainty, the rolling plan is the more financially rational choice even at the higher monthly price.
No contract broadband is the right call if you are...
Renting
UK average tenancy length is around 18 months. Signing a 24-month broadband deal is a genuine financial risk if your tenancy ends first.
A student
Term-time addresses change every year. A rolling plan means you are not paying for broadband in an empty house over summer.
Moving in the next year
Buying a house, relocating for work, or expecting your situation to change. No contract means the timing is yours, not the provider's.
Testing a new provider
Switching providers and not sure about the coverage or reliability in your area yet. Rolling gives you an exit if it is not right.
What to check before signing up to any rolling broadband deal
Not all no-contract deals are as flexible as they appear. These are the things that catch people out.
The mistake most people make with broadband contracts
Most people overestimate how settled they are. If you survey renters about whether they expect to move in the next 24 months, the majority say no. But average UK tenancy length is around 18 months, which means the average renter signing a 24-month broadband contract will either need to break it early, negotiate a transfer to a new address, or get very lucky with timing. Broadband providers structure exit fees knowing this. It is not accidental.
If you own your home and have no plans to move, ignore everything above and go with the cheapest 24-month deal you can find. The maths clearly favours you. Save the £7 to £10 per month premium and use it for something else.
But if your situation has any genuine uncertainty in it at all, the rolling plan is real financial insurance at a modest premium. The key is being honest with yourself about which category you actually fall into rather than the category you want to be in.
No contract vs fixed term, side by side
| Factor | No contract rolling | Fixed term 24-month |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | £3 to £10 more | Lower monthly price |
| Cost if you move early | 30 days notice only | Exit fees up to £300 |
| Flexibility | Complete | Locked in for term |
| Speed options | Superfast and full fibre | Superfast and full fibre |
| Right for renters | Yes | Risky |
| Right for settled homeowners | Paying a premium | Best overall value |
| Price rise risk | Can leave if price rises | Some contracts allow rises |
Use our broadband comparison tool to see rolling and fixed-term deals side by side at your address. You can filter by contract type to see only the no-contract options available where you live, with the actual prices rather than representative estimates.
Questions people ask
A monthly rolling internet plan with no long-term commitment. You pay month to month and can cancel or switch with 30 days notice and no exit fee. It costs slightly more per month than a fixed deal but gives you complete flexibility to leave when you need to without financial penalty.
Typically £3 to £10 more per month depending on the provider and speed tier. Superfast rolling deals run around £28 to £35 per month compared to £22 to £28 on a 24-month contract from the same provider. Full fibre carries a similar or slightly larger premium. The exact difference at your address is what matters most, which is why comparing by postcode gives you the most useful answer.
Several major providers offer rolling plans including NOW Broadband, Sky, Virgin Media, BT, and Vodafone. Providers like Cuckoo and Zen Internet are also known for flexible terms. What is available depends entirely on your address, so checking by postcode is the only reliable way to see your actual options.
Yes. Superfast speeds of 36Mb to 80Mb are widely available on rolling plans. Full fibre rolling plans exist too but are less common and depend on which providers are competing in your specific area. Use our comparison tool to filter by contract type and see what speeds are available on rolling terms at your postcode.
Introductory pricing that rises after a few months, annual price increase clauses, setup fees charged even on rolling plans, and exactly how the notice period works. Some plans require notice by a specific date in the billing cycle or you are charged for another month. Read the terms before signing up rather than finding out after.
If you rent, move regularly, or have any genuine uncertainty about your living situation in the next 12 to 18 months, yes. The insurance against exit fees is worth the monthly premium. If you own your home and are settled with no plans to move, a 24-month contract saves more money over its full term. The honest answer is different for different people.
Related deals and guides
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