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Quickline broadband

Quickline broadband deals

Compare every Quickline broadband deal in one place, speeds up to 1Gbps, contracts from 24-month. Check what's available at your postcode.

Compare up to 3 deals side-by-side
Price rises disclosed
A tree planted for every switch
Deals last checked:

Cheapest Quickline broadband deals

Quickline

Full Fibre 200

Fixed priceTree planted
£24.99
a month
No mid contract price rises
24 month
contract
£0
set-up cost
200Mb
avg speed
Full Fibre
connection
See offer
Quickline

Full Fibre 500

Fixed priceTree planted
£28.99
a month
No mid contract price rises
24 month
contract
£0
set-up cost
500Mb
avg speed
Full Fibre
connection
See offer
Quickline

Full Fibre 1000

Fixed priceTree planted
£32.99
a month
No mid contract price rises
24 month
contract
£0
set-up cost
1000Mb
avg speed
Full Fibre
connection
See offer

Fastest Quickline broadband deals

Quickline

5G airUltra

Fixed priceTree planted
£49.99
a month
No mid contract price rises
24 month
contract
£49.99
set-up cost
200Mb
avg speed
5G
connection
See offer
Quickline

5G airConnect

Fixed priceTree planted
£39.99
a month
No mid contract price rises
24 month
contract
£49.99
set-up cost
100Mb
avg speed
5G
connection
See offer

Deals shown are sampled across UK postcodes to surface the widest mix. Use our postcode checker to see exact pricing and availability at your home.

Network
FTTP/5G
Quickline's own network
Top speed
1Gbps
Prices from
£24.99p/m
Min contract
24months
Customer rating
4.8/ 5
4.6k reviews

Customer rating sourced from Trustpilot. Checked 6 April, 2026.

Why choose Quickline?

No mid-contract price rises

Whatever monthly figure you sign up for is the exact amount you pay for the entire 24 months. This flat-pricing model remains relatively rare among providers running their own infrastructure at this scale.

Dual-technology delivery

Quickline builds full fibre where possible but uses 5G fixed wireless to reach rural homes that lack physical cables. Very few independent networks offer both technologies side by side.

Yorkshire-based support

The provider maintains a customer service team based in Yorkshire, avoiding the offshore call centres used by many larger brands. This local approach contributes to a Trustpilot rating of 4.8 from over 4,500 reviews.

Rural-first independent network

Rather than competing in crowded cities, Quickline focuses purely on hard-to-reach homes. A £250m financing package and Project Gigabit funding back their active rollout across Yorkshire and Lincolnshire.

Founded in 2004 and headquartered in Hull, Quickline has nearly two decades of experience connecting rural homes and businesses across the north of England. They operate as a regional altnet with a specific three-year rollout plan targeting 360,000 rural premises across West, South, and North Yorkshire, York, the East Riding, and Lincolnshire. This active expansion is backed by a £250m financing package from the National Wealth Fund, NatWest, and Northleaf, alongside over £300m in Project Gigabit subsidies aimed at hard-to-reach locations.

The provider distinguishes itself through a practical dual-technology approach. While they lay full fibre wherever possible, they also deploy 5G fixed wireless to reach isolated homes waiting for physical cables. This flexibility is supported by a dedicated Yorkshire-based customer team with strong local knowledge. Their specific focus on challenging rural builds, rather than competing in already-served urban areas, helped them secure the title of Best Broadband Provider in the North East at the 2025 Broadband Genie Regional Awards.

Coverage remains strictly regional by design, so you will not find this service offered on a national scale. They run their own independent infrastructure rather than operating as an Openreach reseller. Because they focus exclusively on rural and hard-to-reach communities in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, availability is highly specific to those exact counties. If you live outside their targeted northern and eastern rollout zones, you will need to look at alternative local altnets or rely on the larger national providers.

Quickline package types

5G airConnect

This 100Mbps fixed wireless package handles high-definition streaming and home working for two or three people. It serves entirely as a fallback option for homes waiting for physical cables, costing noticeably more than faster fibre alternatives.

Full Fibre 200

Delivering 200Mbps, this sits in the everyday sweet spot for most households. It provides comfortable capacity for three or more people to stream, game, and browse across multiple devices simultaneously.

5G airUltra

The higher-tier wireless option provides 200Mbps for rural areas without full fibre access. While it matches the entry-level fibre speed, it carries a substantial price premium for the convenience of a 5G connection.

Full Fibre 500

At 500Mbps, this tier provides necessary headroom for busy homes. It supports multiple people running simultaneous 4K streams, downloading large game updates, and taking video calls without interruption.

Full Fibre 1000

This gigabit connection serves heavy users, content creators, and homes with complex smart setups. This tier suits content creators uploading large files and homes with complex smart setups. The strong upload speeds make a genuine difference for cloud backups and video calls.

Quickline takes a split approach to pricing, sitting firmly in the mid-range for full fibre while charging a premium for 5G. The entry-level Full Fibre 200 delivers 200Mbps for £24.99 a month, which undercuts standard Openreach pricing and remains competitive with other independent networks. However, their 5G fixed wireless packages cost significantly more than the fibre equivalents, with the top 5G tier priced higher than a full gigabit fibre connection despite delivering a fraction of the speed.

Under post-2025 Ofcom rules, mid-contract rises must be stated in pounds and pence at sign-up, but Quickline avoids this entirely by holding prices flat. Whatever monthly figure you agree to on day one remains unchanged for the full 24 months. You cannot opt for a shorter 12-month or rolling agreement on any tier. Setup and router delivery are provided for free across the board, though you will not find the cashback incentives or reward cards common at larger internet providers.

Quickline pros and cons

Pros

  • Trustpilot rating of 4.8 is joint highest among all the providers we list, with a Yorkshire based customer support team behind it
  • No mid-contract price rises on any deal, so the monthly cost stays exactly where you agreed it from start to finish
  • Offers both full fibre and 5G broadband, which means it can serve homes in areas where laying fibre is not yet possible
  • Speeds reach up to 1Gbps on the fibre packages with free setup and a free router included across the range
  • Runs on its own independent network built to connect rural and underserved communities that the big providers often overlook

Cons

  • Coverage is limited to areas where Quickline has built its own network, mainly across Yorkshire and the surrounding rural regions
  • The 5G packages cost noticeably more than the fibre deals for lower speeds, so they work best as a fallback where fibre is not available
  • A small range of five packages with no shorter contract option, so you are committing to 24 months whichever deal you choose

How Quickline compares

Quickline vs BT. Quickline reaches top speeds of 1Gbps, while BT peaks at 900Mbps. Quickline starts at £24.99 for 200Mbps on full fibre, whereas BT charges around £24.99 for a slower 36Mbps connection. Both lock you in for 24 months, but BT applies fixed pounds-and-pence price rises every March and belongs to the Ofcom Automatic Compensation Scheme, whereas Quickline keeps prices flat and does not participate in the scheme.

Quickline vs Cuckoo. Quickline operates its own network and tops out at 1Gbps, while Cuckoo runs on the CityFibre altnet and reaches 900Mbps. Quickline offers an entry-level 200Mbps connection for £24.99, compared to Cuckoo starting at £27 for 150Mbps with initial half-price discounts. Cuckoo offers a 12-month contract option but schedules fixed price rises during 24-month terms, while Quickline requires 24 month agreement but with no mid-contract increases.

Quickline vs Three. Three operates a national mobile network and peaks at 150Mbps, while Quickline is a regional fixed-line provider that uses 5G purely as a fallback, maxing out at 200Mbps on wireless and 1Gbps on fibre. Quickline charges £39.99 for a 100Mbps 5G connection, making it much more expensive than the Three 5G hub at £14 for faster speeds. Both require a 24-month commitment, but Three applies fixed annual price rises every April.

Eco impact

Switch to Quickline and plant trees

Every successful switch through Switchity plants 2 trees through our verified reforestation partner, Ecologi. Our switchers have already captured over 6,000 kg of CO₂ and released nearly 30,900 kg of oxygen annually.

262 / 1000 trees26% to goal
Verified reforestation partner: Ecologi
2
Trees per switch
6,000+ kg
CO₂ captured
£25,000+
Customer savings

Quickline broadband — common questions

Our community impact

Every switch through Switchity supports reforestation and saves our community money on their broadband.

262
Trees grown together
£25,000
Saved by community
£250
Typical yearly saving
738
Trees to go to goal

Pricing and availability for Quickline are based on Switchity's real-time analysis of active deals from our supplier panel. Enter your postcode to see what Quickline can deliver at your address.