Save a bundle with a broadband bundle!

John Fitzsimons
by Lovemoney Staff John Fitzsimons on 17 November 2009  |  Comments 7 comments

You can save a small fortune by bundling your broadband package with your phone line and/or digital TV. John Fitzsimons explores the best bundled deals around.

It might be a pain, but getting the right broadband deal really is worth the effort. I made the mistake of taking a shortcut and going for the first deal I saw that looked ok at the start of the year, and have regretted it ever since.

There's so much to consider though. Should you go with a brand you've never heard of, because they look cheap, or stick to a more expensive but more familiar name. Do you need unlimited downloads? And if you combine your broadband contract with a phoneline (and even digital TV) will that save you a packet, or leave you out of pocket?

Signing up to a bundle can save you a lot of cash, so long as you make the right choice. And thankfully there is now a clever little tool that helps you make the best decision!

Get me a calculator!

Broadbandchoices.co.uk, a comparison website, has developed a broadband bundles calculator, which compares the first year cost of a broadband bundle, including things like line rental and call plan charges.

According to its own research, around 70% of us choose to bundle up our broadband with at least one other service. It also found that all too often we are not taking into account the extra charges which soon bump up how much we shell out each month.

How it works

The calculator is very simple to use.

All you have to do is fill in your postcode (and your phone number, though this is optional) and whether you would like to compare prices simply for broadband, broadband plus calls, broadband plus digital TV, or all three.

The engine then produces the deals available in your region, and how much it will cost you in the first year. It also works out how much it will set you back on a monthly basis, and you can adjust this to include or exclude the line rental.

Finding the best deal for you

Of course, we are all different, and what I want from my bundle might be completely different to you.

So I've put together a collection of different tables outlining the best options for a variety of different uses, which will hopefully demonstrate how going for a bundle can save you... well, a bundle!

(I've based all of my searches on our office here in London, or my own home in Hertfordshire, to get as wide a selection of deals as possible. However you will need to search for your own properties to be certain these deals are available to you)

Broadband + home phone

If you are only interested in sorting out your internet needs, combined with your calls plan, then these are the best options around. I've highlighted the cheapest plan you can get your hands on, the best plan for those of you that do a stack of downloading, and finally the best deal for those of you that love a chat!

The Budget Option

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract limit

Maximum speed

Usage limit

Calls cost

Plusnet

£210.27

£16.94

£6.99

12 months

8mb

10gb

4.5p for calls during the day, free evenings and weekends

The Downloader Option

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract limit

Maximum speed

Usage limit

Calls cost

Talk Talk

£344.87

£26.24

£29.99

18 months

24mb

Unlimited

4.5p for calls during the day, free evenings and weekends

The Chatterbox Option

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract limit

Maximum speed

Usage limit

Calls cost

Plusnet

£270.27

£21.94

£6.99

12 months

8mb

10gb

All completely free

Broadband + Digital TV

Only two providers, Sky and BT, offer the combination of just broadband and Digital TV, so I have highlighted their best deals based on price and downloading.

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract length

Maximum speed

Usage limit

TV Package

SKY

£300

£22.50

£30

12 months

2mb

2gb

Choose from one of Sky's 6 entertainment packs (excluding Sports and Movies).

BT

£333.33

£15.12 for three months, £30.33 thereafter

£15

18 months

20mb

10gb

Bronze value pack.

SKY

£420

£32.50

£30

12 months

20mb

Unlimited

Choose from one of Sky's 6 entertainment packs (excluding Sports and Movies).

BT

£445.05

£25.93 for three months, £39.14 thereafter

£15

18 months

20mb

Unlimited

Bronze value pack.

The ultimate bundle!

However, if you want one package which will cover all of your internet, TV and phone needs, then you will want one of the all-encompassing bundle packages.

Once again, I've put together a selection of the best deals based on price, broadband options and the cost of calls. With something like digital TV how good the selection of channels are is pretty subjective, so you'll have to decide for yourself if it is an irresistible offer!

The Budget Options

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract length

Maximum speed

Usage limit

TV Package

Calls cost

Tiscali

£269.88

£19.99

£30

12 months

8mb

Unlimited

Over 70 digital channels and 1,500 on demand movies

4.5p daytime calls, 1.48p evenings, free at weekends

Virgin Media

£327

£30.50

n/a

12 months

10mb

Unlimited

Over 65 channels, choice of TV, films and music on demand

6.36p daytime and evening calls, free at weekends

The Downloader Options

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract length

Maximum speed

Usage limit

TV Package

Calls cost

Virgin Media

£372

£35

n/a

12 months

10mb

Unlimited

Over 100 channels, choice of TV, films and music on demand

6.36p daytime and evening calls, free at weekends

SKY

£492

£38.50

£30

12 months

20mb

Unlimited

Choose from one of Sky's 6 entertainment packs (excluding Sports and Movies).

5.25p daytime calls, free in the evenings and at weekends

The Chatterbox Options

Provider

First year cost

Monthly charge (including line rental)

One-off costs

Contract length

Maximum speed

Usage limit

TV Package

Calls cost

Tiscali

£329.88

£24.99

£30

12 months

8mb

Unlimited

Over 70 digital channels and 1,500 on demand movies

Free at all times

SKY

£432

£33.50

£30

12 months

2mb

2gb

Choose from one of Sky's 6 entertainment packs (excluding Sports and Movies).

Free at all times

Under the radar options

Of course, as good as these comparison sites are, there are always some providers that don't get a look in as they are not on the site's panel. One such provider, which is always mentioned by readers whenever we write about broadband, is the Utility Warehouse.

The firm offers two broadband plus calls packages, both with connection speeds up to 24mb. The basic deal has a usage limit of 40gb, with the cost starting at £19.99 a month, while the premium package has unlimited usage, with prices starting at £24.99 a month. On both packages calls are free at weekends, 2.45p at peak times, and 3.45p per call in the evenings.

Undoubtedly both of these deals are exceptionally competitive, and demonstrate that sometimes great deals do not necessarily show up on tools like that offered by Broadbandchoices.co.uk. So before you sign up to a new deal, make sure you haven't missed any competitors that might offer an even better deal!

Lower all your bills!

If you want to lower all your bills, not just your broadband bills, then follow the tips in this goal to Lower your household bills. Alternatively, if you have any broadband-related questions, why not head over to our Q&A section and pick the brains of your fellow lovemoney.com readers?

More: Five easy ways to speed up your broadband | The Best Broadband Dongle

Compare savings accounts at lovemoney.com

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Comments (7)

  • Hardtruth
    Love rating 66
    Hardtruth said

    All rubbish compared to the speeds and services offered in some other countries which in a number of cases are 10X faster. Sadly in this nation we are culturally programmed to accept 2nd rate anything.

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • muffindell66
    Love rating 4
    muffindell66 said

    None of this matters if your package has a high contention ratio or traffic shaping. It would be more useful to know these facts when buying and before any other consideration of things such has download speed or price. You may have a download speed rated at UP TO 20mb, but it's more useful of what you will actually achieve during the course of day and evening.

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    This is a complex subject. I have a qualification in telecommunications and I get confused! First you have DSL through cable. DSL is dial up subscriber line and ADSL goes through a telephone exchange; Asynchronous  Dial Up Subscriber Line. When the light is flashing on you modem; it's dialling. DSL should give upload and download speeds the same. It connects initially by cable (that's why they call it cable!) and then by fibre optic and so has the potential for higher speeds. The speeds are download and upload and so it can have high speed both ways. This is not always the case and I have seen DSL that is pathetically low speeds and prone to faults. ADSL will give you a reasonable download speed but the upload will be around 400 Kb/s and the download will often be UP TO 8 Mb/s Remember the words UP TO, they don't guarantee 8Mb/s. Don't get your bits and bytes confused! 8Mb/s is 8 million bits per second about 1 MB of data. So at 8Mb/s a 4 Mb MP3 will download in 4 seconds once it's done the handshake and made the connection. You may also have a static IP (internet protocol) the address of your computer on DSL. On ADSL you have have a dynamic IP that is assigned every time you connect.

    BT sent me an offer the other day offering high speeds faster than my telephone exchange is rated at. I presume they are using some sort of compression. But optimisation can get past the maximum speed of the exchange and so that was a waste of money. The con was a cheaper fee for the first few months and a complete rip off after that. The only good part was their wireless router appears to be better than many. 

    I use TalkTalk, who are technically useless most of the time. But I did hear that they owed some of their technical staff wages not long ago and disgruntled workers are often unenthusiastic. It does work most of the time though but the website is confusing. If you can set up Outlook or Outlook Express for you email; rather than messing about on the AOL server trying to check your TalkTalk email; it is OK for email. Speeds can be better than the exchange is rated if you have it set up right. the 15 MB of web space is a little pathetic, around 20 people actually use it. TalkTalk could increase the size of sub-domains to 100 Mb and assign one technical staff member to give support who knows what he is doing and that would help them sell their broadband. They did bring out "free" calls like BT to 0845 and 0870 numbers but not to some existing customers. I actually have to downgrade my account to one that gives me "free" calls at evenings and weekends and lose my International option to get that. It would be a few pounds cheaper and so I am considering it. I don't make many calls during the daytime anyway. Government and police 0845 numbers with their connection charge and "local" rate tend to be expensive when you have gone through the stupid voice mail system. Press one if you **** is itching, etc... The NHS direct number is an absolute disgrace; the whole idea was to take pressure off doctors and hospitals not rip patients off and cause them unnecessary anxiety. 

    Don't fall for the "free" laptop scam or anything "free"; there is no such thing as a free lunch, laptop, broadband or anything else. Go for the cheapest because education, education, education has failed miserably and we have poor technical support whoever you go with. I'll stick with TalkTalk; they are at least cheap, who else would sponsor the X factor! lol

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • old fan
    Love rating 0
    old fan said

    Up to 8Mb Broadband (I actually get 6Mb)

    All telephone calls at any time (01 and 02 numbers) + some international calls.

    Line rental

    All for £19.99 a month from Tiscali - you can't beat it!!

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • fenemore
    Love rating 205
    fenemore said

    It may cost me a few quid more but I prefer to keep my suppliers separate. My landline phone is BT, Virgin (fibre-optic) broadband, TV with SKY.

    If ever I have a problem I will not lose all 3 services - accepting a bundled services supplier is putting all your eggs in one basket. I cannot be held to ransom by any one of the above - and they are always offering me discounts to stay with them.

    Best of both worlds I call it!

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • daguerrotype
    Love rating 0
    daguerrotype said

    Someone on this thread is complaining about the cost of 0845/0870 etc calls - here's how to do something about it:

    sign the petitions on the no10 website:

    http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/freecall-nhs/

    Use www.sayNOto0870.com - gives alternative landline rate numbers

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • angussb
    Love rating 1
    angussb said

    Can I just say that it was refreshing to see Utility Warehouse being mentioned.One small point- many UW customers get free calls 24/7 because they take 2 more services (gas, electricity, mobile.)

    As for complaints about broadband speeds- I quite agree. Even the Philippines provides better speeds in many areas. However, where I live, a city, I don't expect to ever be offered cable, so am happy to get the best speed I can.

    Report on 17 November 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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