Millions of broadband customers across Britain are being penalised just for
living in the ‘wrong’ area, reveals uSwitch.com.
The independent price comparison and switching service said depending on
where someone lives can mean they can pay a minimum of £10 a month more for
broadband services.
It named internet service providers (ISPs) such as TalkTalk, Sky, UK Online
and Virgin Media as guilty of differentiating both the price and speed of their
broadband services for some areas in the UK.
This ‘two-tier’ pricing system is particularly evident in the more sparsely
populated rural areas because these customers often fall outside an ISPs
local
loop unbundling (LLU) network.
Installing their own equipment into BT exchanges means broadband companies
have been given more flexibility over the costs and speeds they offer their
customers. The result has been a wave of highly competitive deals as companies
have aggressively sought to sign up as many new customers as possible in a very
short time frame
However, of the UK's 13 million broadband connections, only 1.5 million lines
are unbundled and just 45 per cent of the population can access the cable
network.
So while broadband prices fell by up to 17 per cent last year and are
continuing to fall, this is not the case for many customersb who fall outside an
ISP's LLU network because it is not economic to introduce LLU to these
households.
The result according to uSwitch is people in rural areas are effectively
classed as ‘second class citizens’ in the eyes of the broadband operators.
Now AOL has announced it is introducing two new tariffs, with customers
outside its LLU network paying £10 a month more for its services. USwitch warned
ISPs were creating a new broadband 'class system' and called for a halt to what
it terms 'this postcode lottery'.
Steve Weller, head of communication services at uSwitch said: “The new
tariffs introduced by AOL bring into sharp focus the digital divide that is
forming between LLU and non-LLU households.
"Unfortunately, AOL is not the only company to penalise households not
falling within their unbundled network. Rural areas tend to be the ones being
neglected by the LLU roll-out.
"With a lower number of homes to every exchange, broadband providers aren’t
able to claw back enough value out of their investment, so instead have
concentrated on unbundling areas with a higher population density.
"People living in the country are effectively second class citizens in the
eyes of the broadband operators. It’s simply not acceptable that one customer
may be paying £19.99 a month for a service of up to 1Mb yet their friends down
the road could be paying just £14.99 for a 2Mb service – as is the case with UK
Online - just because their postcode happens to fall under their provider’s LLU
hit list."
From 22 May, AOL will offer customers living within its LLU network a
2Mbit/sec service for £14.99 a month and an 8Mbit/sec service for £29.99.
Customers living outside the LLU network will be offered the same services for
£24.99 and £39.99 respectively.
uSwitch said AOL was potentially reducing the attraction of the deal for 40
per cent of the population. Although it said it was fortunate that companies
such as Orange, Tiscali and Pipex were not "succumbing to this regional
discrimination policy" it warned there was nothing to stop them.
"Who’s to say they won’t jump on the bandwagon soon? We are calling for this
new ‘postcode lottery’ practice to be halted in its tracks before other
providers join in, denying more consumers the chance to benefit from the great
deals that are currently out there," said Weller
People can use the uSwitch.com postcode
checker on the website to find the best deal depending on where they live or
call 0800 093 06 07.
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