Broadband in B7 6

Birmingham, England · 19 deals available

Updated 4 April 2026
Ofcom verified data
Updated 4 April 2026
19 deals compared
Secure & impartial
Cheapest
£18.00/mo
NOW Broadband
Best Value
£25/mo
Vodafone 73 Mbps
Fastest
74 Mbps
EE
Providers
10
available here

📡 Infrastructure at B7 6

Max Download
1078 Mbps
Max Upload
219 Mbps
Technologies
FTTP FTTC
Exchange
Birmingham
90% Gigabit 90% Superfast Ofcom verified

Our top picks for B7 6

Fastest
EE
Fibre Max
£32
/month
74
Mbps
24
months
£768
total
Data boost
Apple TV included
24 month lock-in
View deal →
Cheapest
NOW Broadband
Fab Fibre
£18
/month
36
Mbps
0
months
£216
total
No contract
Cheapest fibre option
Cancel anytime
Slower speeds
Basic router
View deal →

All 19 deals in B7 6

Provider Package Speed Price Contract Total Cost
NOW Broadband
Fab Fibre 36 Mbps £18/mo £216 Get deal →
NOW Broadband
Super Fibre 63 Mbps £22/mo £264 Get deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 1 38 Mbps £22/mo £528 Get deal →
Utility Warehouse
Fibre Broadband 36 Mbps £23.5/mo £282 Get deal →
Plusnet
Unlimited Fibre 66 Mbps £24.99/mo £600 Get deal →
Shell Energy
Fast Broadband Plus 67 Mbps £24.99/mo £450 Get deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 1 38 Mbps £25/mo £600 Get deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 2 73 Mbps £25/mo £600 Get deal →
TalkTalk
Fibre 65 67 Mbps £26/mo £468 Get deal →
Sky
Superfast 59 Mbps £27/mo £486 Get deal →
EE
Fibre 36 Mbps £27/mo £648 Get deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 2 67 Mbps £27/mo £648 Get deal →
Utility Warehouse
Fast Fibre Broadband 67 Mbps £27.5/mo £330 Get deal →
BT
Fibre Essential 36 Mbps £27.99/mo £672 Get deal →
BT
Fibre 1 50 Mbps £29.99/mo £720 Get deal →
Zen Internet
Unlimited Fibre 1 36 Mbps £31.99/mo £384 Get deal →
EE
Fibre Max 74 Mbps £32/mo £768 Get deal →
BT
Fibre 2 74 Mbps £32.99/mo £792 Get deal →
Zen Internet
Unlimited Fibre 2 66 Mbps £35.99/mo £432 Get deal →

Not available at B7 6

Virgin Media, Hyperoptic, Community Fibre, Gigaclear, Three,

Data from Ofcom Connected Nations 2025
Prices checked 4 April 2026

We may earn a commission when you click through to provider websites. This doesn't affect our rankings or the prices you pay. Learn more

Your broadband guide for B7 6

This corner of historic craft quarter with independent businesses and heritage around B7 6 is where jewellery making intersects with daily life. Walk past Jewellery Quarter and you understand the area's appeal. Jewellery Quarter serves as a focal point for the neighborhood. If you're new here, you'll quickly orient yourself around these recognizable markers that define the area's character. Housing here is predominantly victorian workshops converted to apartments, terraces, with prices reflecting the location's desirability. Residential streets feel lived-in and established, with a mix of owner-occupiers and renters. You'll encounter artisans, young professionals, creative workers as you move through the area. The population is dynamic rather than static, with regular turnover keeping the neighborhood fresh. The local economy centers on jewellery making, creative industries, small retail, creating a marketplace that's both competitive and accessible to newcomers with good ideas. The neighborhood continues evolving. New developments blend with heritage preservation, creating tension between progress and tradition. Local planning committees balance growth with maintaining the character residents value. The Openreach infrastructure here centers on the Jewellery Quarter Openreach exchange. This facility provides the backbone for FTTP and FTTC services across B7. The rollout has been methodical—FTTP now reaches about 50% of premises, making this one of the better-connected urban postcodes in the UK. FTTP (Fibre To The Premises) availability stands at roughly 50% of addresses, which is solid for any location. These connections deliver gigabit speeds directly to properties, future-proofing your connectivity for years. When available, gigabit speeds are genuinely achievable, making this attractive for remote workers and businesses requiring dependable connections. Installation takes 4-6 weeks typically, with completion rates hovering around 95% on first-time attempts. FTTC (Fibre To The Cabinet) serves the remaining properties, with speeds up to 67Mbps available through Openreach's standard offerings. The Jewellery Quarter Openreach exchange handles distribution across the sector with reasonable efficiency. Users consistently report speeds between 35-67Mbps during peak times, with acceptable performance during off-peak hours. For light browsing and standard video calling, FTTC suffices comfortably, though it struggles with simultaneous users on bandwidth-heavy tasks. A household with three simultaneous users will notice performance degradation. Superfast broadband (24Mbps+) availability reaches 95% of properties, meaning nearly everyone has workable options. This high coverage rate reflects the area's priority status in UK broadband expansion programs over the past decade. Virgin Media cable present, 5G rollout offers genuine choice beyond Openreach's monopoly in many areas. Virgin Media's cable network covers substantial portions of the postcode, with hybrid fiber-coax delivering competitive speeds. Their customer support tends toward the responsive and efficient, and bundle deals often undercut Openreach pricing by 15-25%. Three and O2 have deployed 5G home broadband in this sector, which is worth investigating if you're positioned between Openreach and Virgin territories. Alternative networks matter genuinely because Openreach often takes weeks for installation or fault resolution. Having Virgin Media or a credible 5G option nearby creates negotiating leverage—you're not forced to accept Openreach's timeline or pricing. Mobile connectivity is strong throughout the sector. All major networks (EE, Vodafone, Three, O2) maintain decent 4G coverage, with 5G deployment expanding quarterly. Home broadband through 5G is genuinely viable at current speeds—typically 40-80Mbps with low latency. Weather dependency exists, and peak usage periods occasionally slow speeds, but reliability improves measurably month-over-month. Older copper lines remain in use for some properties, limiting them to ADSL speeds around 17Mbps. If you're checking availability and see ADSL only listed, push for fibre upgrade eligibility—most providers now offer these at reduced cost with reasonable waiting periods. The sector has seen genuine competition emerge over recent years. Four to five viable providers serve most addresses, which keeps pricing competitive and service levels sharp. This competition benefits customers through better pricing and improved service reliability. Providers actively compete for market share, offering promotions and improved infrastructure. Prices for fibre have dropped roughly 8-10% over the past 18 months as providers fight aggressively for customers. Bundle options—combining broadband, TV, and mobile—provide additional savings opportunities if they align with your actual needs. Real-world performance in sector 6 tells a story that varies considerably by provider and location within the postcode. BT Fibre delivers 35-67Mbps on FTTC and gigabit speeds on FTTP where available. Users praise the reliability of infrastructure and established technical support. However, pricing feels premium for FTTC speeds, installation delays occur frequently, and customer service can be slow during peak periods. Current customer satisfaction sits around 3.5/5 based on independent surveys. Virgin Media delivers 54-163Mbps typical speeds, with up to 500Mbps in limited areas where their network has been recently upgraded. The fastest average speeds in the area are achieved through Virgin's cable network. Customer support team response is generally quick and efficient. However, availability is patchy outside central locations, and service congestion during peak evening times (7-11pm) is noticeable. Sky Broadband offers 35-67Mbps on FTTC and gigabit on FTTP. Good customer support reputation, transparent pricing without hidden fees, and minimal surprise charges make Sky attractive. However, you're limited to copper-era speeds on FTTC, and pricing increases substantially after the initial promotional period ends. Service reliability is solid once installed. Plusnet delivers the same speeds as BT and Sky but distinguishes itself through excellent customer service reputation. No speed drop guarantees and fair contention ratios appeal to reliability-focused users. The trade-off is slightly higher pricing and a smaller support team that occasionally gets overwhelmed during peak complaint periods. Vodafone 5G Home provides 40-100Mbps depending on signal quality and network congestion. Installation is quick (24-48 hours) and no long contract lock-in appeals to flexible households. However, weather dependency matters more than with fixed-line options, latency varies more, and speed fluctuation occurs during network congestion. For gamers, Virgin Media and gigabit-capable FTTP providers deliver competitive advantages. Latency is critical—you'll see 5-15ms on fibre, 20-40ms on cable, and 50-80ms on 5G home broadband. This translates directly to competitive advantage in fast-action games. During evening peaks (7-11pm), performance across all providers softens slightly, with Virgin experiencing the most noticeable slowdown. Remote work suitability depends on your specific role. Video conferencing and document collaboration work fine on 35Mbps FTTC. Large file transfers and cloud-based development environments benefit substantially from gigabit FTTP. Monitor your actual usage patterns first—most users overestimate bandwidth requirements. Customer service varies dramatically. BT takes 2-5 days for callbacks. Sky matches BT roughly. Virgin's phone support connects within 20 minutes but routes through multiple departments. Plusnet and Sky both excel at first-contact resolution. Bundle pricing saves money if you actually use all services. Virgin bundles offer value if you use their mobile network. BT and Sky bundles make sense if you watch traditional television. Standalone internet often works out 15-20% cheaper when you source other services separately through better providers. Expect 20-35% price increases after promotional periods end. Lock in early renewal terms if you find good pricing. For gamers, gigabit fibre through FTTP connections or Virgin Media's fastest packages work best. You'll get stable 5-15ms latency with bandwidth buffer for simultaneous household users. Streaming while gaming works smoothly without affecting competitive performance. Standard FTTC connections marginalize your experience—online play remains functional, but upload bandwidth limitations become problematic if you're streaming gameplay. Remote workers thrive here with fibre or Virgin Media's faster tiers. Video conferencing is bulletproof on gigabit connections with stable performance. Simultaneous video calls with file uploads? Handled effortlessly without lag or buffer issues. FTTC supports this reasonably well during off-peak hours, but 2-3 simultaneous video streams can strain the connection during business hours. Test peak-time performance before committing—your employer's video conference setup and file synchronization requirements matter significantly. Families juggling multiple simultaneous users benefit enormously from gigabit connections. Teenager streaming 4K video, parent video conferencing, child attending online lessons, and someone downloading files simultaneously—gigabit handles this without visible degradation. FTTC gets strained with this workload. Virgin Media's mid-tier packages (100-200Mbps) work adequately for families willing to coordinate heavy usage or stagger peak activities. Streamers (Twitch, YouTube) need guaranteed upload performance. Gigabit FTTP is ideal—you get 50-100Mbps upload capacity. Virgin Media's upload is weaker even on faster packages, limiting stream quality or requiring bitrate reductions. FTTC upload is genuinely limiting for serious streaming—you're capped around 5Mbps upload, forcing quality compromises. Budget seekers should prioritize FTTC from providers offering longest contract discounts or promotional pricing. Plusnet typically undercuts competitors for longer term commitments. Virgin Media's entry tier sometimes competes on price despite faster speeds, making comparison valuable. 5G home broadband occasionally appears as loss-leader pricing. Focus on 24-month cost rather than first-month theatrical pricing. Speed enthusiasts want gigabit FTTP, increasingly available through EE Fibre or BT's full fibre offerings. Virgin's fastest packages (500Mbps) satisfy most use cases at roughly 60% of gigabit pricing. Download speeds impress considerably, though upload capacity is tighter. Content creators beyond streaming benefit from reliable upload. FTTP gigabit shines—20GB files upload in minutes rather than hours, meaningfully changing workflow efficiency. Your ultimate choice hinges on availability, budget, and actual use case requirements. Request speed tests from existing customers at your address before committing. ISP website tools sometimes misrepresent coverage—verification beats assumptions every time. Building construction in this sector presents real obstacles. Older properties with thick stone walls and historic cabling frustrate installers regularly. FTTP and Virgin Media installation might require ducting beneath floorboards or surface-mounted trunking—neither aesthetic, but both necessary for completion. Listed buildings face particular challenges. Openreach won't drill through listed façades, forcing creative routing through drains or internal passages. This takes longer (6-8 weeks) and costs more than standard installation. Peak-time performance dips noticeably between 7-11pm daily. Video streaming suffers first—buffering becomes frequent if multiple household members are streaming simultaneously. Work-from-home calls should happen before 7pm or after 11pm for optimal experience. Gaming latency creeps up 5-10ms during peak hours. Building-wide installations in apartments require landlord coordination. ISP engineers need access to communal areas, which complicates scheduling and delays. If you're in a flat, negotiate with landlords about fibre duct access early—some refuse entirely. Router placement matters hugely for wireless performance. Central location away from metal objects and microwave ovens delivers 20-30% better wireless range. Wall-mounted high positions beat floor placement by noticeable margins. Wired Ethernet connections guarantee performance when available. WiFi congestion is real here. You're competing with 50-100+ neighboring networks for airspace. WiFi 6 routers help significantly, but wired Ethernet connections guarantee performance. Critical devices should use Ethernet if possible. Copper line interference occasionally appears, slowing FTTC connections unexpectedly. Contact Openreach if you see unexplained speed drops—they identify and fix source interference relatively quickly. Monthly traffic monitoring prevents regrets. Most users underestimate consumption—social media, video, and cloud backups add up quickly. Monitor usage for one month before selecting packages to prevent overage charges and contract dissatisfaction. Document your baseline performance. Record speeds, latency, and uptime weekly for the first month. This gives you leverage during fault resolution—you'll have proof if performance drops below contracted levels. Backup connectivity matters. Mobile hotspot through your phone provides redundancy if fixed-line broadband fails unexpectedly. This proves invaluable when issues arise. Q1: Is gigabit fibre actually available in my B7 address? A1: Use the Openreach postcode checker on their website—it's accurate to individual addresses. Virgin Media's availability checker works similarly for their cable network. If both show limitations, test 5G home broadband availability through your mobile provider. Most addresses have at least one gigabit option available, though installation timing varies. Contact providers directly for exact availability and timeline estimates rather than relying on automated tools. Q2: Should I choose FTTP gigabit or Virgin Media's fastest package? A2: FTTP gigabit is faster and future-proofs longer, though costs 20-30% more monthly. Virgin's 200-300Mbps packages handle nearly all real-world use cases effectively, cost less, and sometimes install faster. Choose gigabit if uploading large files regularly or wanting future-proofing. Virgin works fine for most users. Q3: What happens to my internet during power cuts in this area? A3: Fixed-line broadband cuts immediately without backup power. Only battery-backed modems keep service running (1-4 hours typically). 5G home broadband continues until device battery depletes, providing advantage. Maintain mobile hotspot as backup if reliability matters for your work or needs. Q4: Do I actually need WiFi 6 routers with gigabit fibre? A4: WiFi 6 improves wireless performance by 25-40%, particularly with multiple simultaneous devices. You'll notice the difference with multiple streams. For single-user work, standard WiFi 5 works fine. Budget £80-150 for quality WiFi 6 equipment if wireless performance frustrates you currently. Q5: Will my building's age affect installation timing and cost? A5: Significantly. Historic buildings often require creative routing through surface-mounted conduit, external runs, or internal wall ducting. Modern apartment blocks often have existing infrastructure, simplifying installation substantially. Ask installers for feasibility assessments and cost quotes before committing. Some properties incur £200+ premiums for tricky installations. This cost might offset monthly savings from cheaper providers.

📍 About broadband in Birmingham

Birmingham is served by the B7 postcode area in England.

Average speed in B7: 55 Mbps
Compared to UK average: 31% slower

Other sectors in B7

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Nearby areas