Cheapest Wightfibre broadband deals
Full-Fibre 300
Full-Fibre 300
Full-Fibre 500
Full-Fibre 500
Fastest Wightfibre broadband deals
Full-Fibre 900
Full-Fibre 900
Full-Fibre 900 with Wightfibre TV + Phone + WiFi
+ PhoneFull-Fibre 900 with Wightfibre TV + Phone + WiFi
+ PhoneFull-Fibre 300 with Wightfibre TV + Phone + WiFi
+ PhoneFull-Fibre 300 with Wightfibre TV + Phone + WiFi
+ PhoneDeals shown are sampled across UK postcodes to surface the widest mix. Use our postcode checker to see exact pricing and availability at your home.
Customer rating sourced from Trustpilot. Checked 6 April, 2026.
Why choose Wightfibre?
30-day rolling contracts
Every package runs on a one-month rolling agreement rather than a standard 18 or 24-month term. This gives you the freedom to cancel or change your service with just 30 days of notice.
No mid-contract price rises
Your monthly cost is predictable because this provider does not apply annual price increases. What you agree to pay at sign-up is what you continue to pay.
Island-based support team
The call centre, support staff, and engineering teams are all based locally on the Isle of Wight. This means you speak to local staff who understand the specific network geography.
Independent full-fibre network
They own and operate their own infrastructure rather than reselling space on the Openreach network. This gives them direct control over repairs, installations, and network upgrades.
TV and phone bundles
You can combine your internet with a television package, a free phone line with anytime calls, and whole-home WiFi. This provides a single-bill solution from one local provider.
Wightfibre traces its roots back to 2001 when it evolved from the Isle of Wight Cable and Telephone Company. Headquartered in Cowes, the company operates its own independent infrastructure rather than relying on the Openreach network. Since 2017, they have invested over £90 million to upgrade their legacy hybrid fibre-coax network to a modern FTTP network, with a planned footprint of around 78,000 premises across the island. The provider will celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2026.
The defining feature of this provider is flexibility. Every package they offer operates on a 30-day rolling contract, meaning you are never tied into a long agreement. They also commit to no mid-contract price rises across their entire range. Alongside this, they run a completely localised operation. Their call centre, support staff, and engineering teams are all based on the island, providing a level of local accountability that national providers simply cannot match.
You can only get this service if you live on the Isle of Wight. The network does not extend to the mainland, making this a strictly regional offering. While many alternative networks have patchy coverage within their target areas, this provider is the dominant FTTP operator across the island. If your home falls within their rollout zone, you deal directly with the network owner rather than a middleman reselling another wholesale company’s connection.
Wightfibre package types
Full-Fibre 150
This package comfortably supports households of three or more people who want to stream in HD, play games online, and connect multiple smartphones at once. It serves as a sensible, capable starting point for most island homes.
Full-Fibre 300 with Wightfibre TV + Phone + WiFi
This option provides capacity for simultaneous 4K streams and busier device counts. It bundles the internet connection with television services, a free phone line with anytime calls, and whole-home WiFi, making it a convenient single-bill choice.
Full-Fibre 500
Aimed at homes with four or more heavy internet users, this tier handles multiple people streaming and gaming simultaneously. It provides useful headroom for demanding households rather than just covering essential daily capacity.
Full-Fibre 900
This fast option is built for busy households where several people are downloading large game files, streaming in 4K, and working from home at the exact same time. You will need modern Wi-Fi 6 or newer hardware on your devices to see the full benefit of these speeds wirelessly.
Pricing here sits in the mid-range to premium bracket for the speeds offered. For example, the Wightfibre Full-Fibre 150 package delivers 150Mbps for £30.95 a month on a 1-month contract. This entry point is higher than what mainstream Openreach providers charge for similar FTTP speeds. The trade-off for this higher monthly cost is the flexibility of having every package on a one-month rolling agreement, with no longer-term commitments available.
You also get predictable monthly bills. Wightfibre explicitly applies no mid-contract price rises across their range. The price you agree at sign-up remains flat for the duration of your agreement. They do not currently offer switching incentives or gift cards.
Wightfibre pros and cons
Pros
- Every single deal is a 30 day rolling contract with no tie-in, which is the most flexible offering we have seen from any provider
- Trustpilot rating of 4.6 backed by a fully island based call centre, engineers and support staff
- No mid-contract price rises on any package, so the monthly cost is completely predictable
- TV, phone and whole home WiFi bundles are available if you want everything from one local provider
- 100% full fibre across the range with speeds up to 900Mbps, delivered over WightFibre's own network
Cons
- Only available on the Isle of Wight, so this is not an option for anyone on the mainland
- Monthly prices sit a bit higher than what you would find from larger providers at comparable speeds
- An upfront fee may apply, so factor that into the cost even though there is no long term contract to commit to
How Wightfibre compares
Wightfibre vs BT. Both providers reach maximum speeds of 900Mbps, but BT offers cheaper entry-level prices and includes reward cards for new customers. Wightfibre operates exclusively on one-month rolling agreements with no mid-contract price rises, while BT requires a 24-month commitment and applies fixed pounds-and-pence price increases every March.
Wightfibre vs Sky. Sky reaches faster maximum speeds on its multi-gig packages and offers cheaper starting prices, often paired with gift cards. Wightfibre provides one-month rolling terms across its entire range with fixed pricing, whereas Sky asks for a 24-month commitment and retains the right to increase prices mid-contract.
Wightfibre vs EE. EE delivers faster maximum speeds and cheaper starting prices than Wightfibre, alongside switching credit and reward cards. However, EE ties you into a 24-month contract with scheduled pounds-and-pence price rises applied every March, while Wightfibre gives you the freedom of a 30-day rolling deal with no mid-contract price increases.
Switch to Wightfibre 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.
Wightfibre broadband — common questions
Our community impact
Every switch through Switchity supports reforestation and saves our community money on their broadband.
Pricing and availability for Wightfibre are based on Switchity's real-time analysis of active deals from our supplier panel. Enter your postcode to see what Wightfibre can deliver at your address.