Broadband in LL12 3

Wrexham, Wales · 57 deals available

Updated 4 April 2026
Ofcom verified data
Updated 4 April 2026
57 deals compared
Secure & impartial
Cheapest
£18.00/mo
NOW Broadband
Best Value
£32.5/mo
Community Fibre 1000 Mbps
Fastest
1130 Mbps
Virgin Media
Providers
14
available here

📡 Infrastructure at LL12 3

Max Download
1053 Mbps
Max Upload
117 Mbps
Technologies
FTTP FTTC
Exchange
Wrexham
85% Gigabit 95% Superfast Ofcom verified

Our top picks for LL12 3

Fastest
Virgin Media
Gig1 Fibre
£50
/month
1130
Mbps
18
months
£900
total
Gigabit speeds
Future proof
Own network
Expensive
Price rises
Cable areas only
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 57 deals in LL12 3

Provider Package Speed Price Contract Total Cost
NOW Broadband
Fab Fibre 36 Mbps £18/mo £216 Get deal →
Hyperoptic
50Mb Fibre 50 Mbps £20/mo £240 Get deal →
NOW Broadband
Super Fibre 63 Mbps £22/mo £264 Get deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 1 38 Mbps £22/mo £528 Get deal →
Community Fibre
Essential 150 Mbps £22.5/mo £540 Get deal →
Community Fibre
Starter 150 150 Mbps £22.5/mo £540 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 →
Hyperoptic
150Mb 150 Mbps £25/mo £300 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 →
Community Fibre
Superfast 500 500 Mbps £27.5/mo £660 Get deal →
Plusnet
Full Fibre 145 145 Mbps £27.99/mo £672 Get deal →
BT
Fibre Essential 36 Mbps £27.99/mo £672 Get deal →
Virgin Media
M125 Fibre 132 Mbps £28/mo £504 Get deal →
Community Fibre
Superfast 500 Mbps £28/mo £672 Get deal →
Vodafone
Pro II Full Fibre 100 100 Mbps £28/mo £672 Get deal →
NOW Broadband
Full Fibre 100 100 Mbps £28/mo £336 Get deal →
TalkTalk
Fibre 150 150 Mbps £29/mo £522 Get deal →
BT
Fibre 1 50 Mbps £29.99/mo £720 Get deal →
Utility Warehouse
Full Fibre 150 150 Mbps £31.5/mo £378 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 →
NOW Broadband
Full Fibre 300 300 Mbps £32/mo £384 Get deal →
Community Fibre
Hyperfast 1000 1000 Mbps £32.5/mo £780 Get deal →
BT
Fibre 2 74 Mbps £32.99/mo £792 Get deal →
Plusnet
Full Fibre 300 300 Mbps £32.99/mo £792 Get deal →
Virgin Media
M250 Fibre 264 Mbps £33/mo £594 Get deal →
Sky
Ultrafast 145 Mbps £33/mo £594 Get deal →
EE
Full Fibre 150 150 Mbps £34/mo £816 Get deal →
BT
Full Fibre 100 100 Mbps £34.99/mo £840 Get deal →
Hyperoptic
500Mb 500 Mbps £35/mo £420 Get deal →
Community Fibre
Hyperfast 1000 Mbps £35/mo £840 Get deal →
Gigaclear
Superfast 300 300 Mbps £35/mo £630 Get deal →
Vodafone
Pro II Full Fibre 500 500 Mbps £35/mo £840 Get deal →
TalkTalk
Fibre 500 500 Mbps £35/mo £630 Get deal →
Zen Internet
Unlimited Fibre 2 66 Mbps £35.99/mo £432 Get deal →
Plusnet
Full Fibre 500 500 Mbps £37.99/mo £912 Get deal →
Virgin Media
M500 Fibre 516 Mbps £38/mo £684 Get deal →
EE
Full Fibre 500 500 Mbps £39/mo £936 Get deal →
BT
Full Fibre 300 300 Mbps £39.99/mo £960 Get deal →
Vodafone
Pro II Full Fibre 910 910 Mbps £40/mo £960 Get deal →
Sky
Ultrafast Plus 500 Mbps £43/mo £774 Get deal →
BT
Full Fibre 500 500 Mbps £44.99/mo £1080 Get deal →
Hyperoptic
1Gb 1000 Mbps £45/mo £540 Get deal →
EE
Full Fibre 900 900 Mbps £49/mo £1176 Get deal →
Vodafone
Pro Xtra 900 Mbps £50/mo £1200 Get deal →
Virgin Media
Gig1 Fibre 1130 Mbps £50/mo £900 Get deal →
Sky
Gigafast 900 Mbps £50/mo £900 Get deal →
BT
Full Fibre 900 900 Mbps £54.99/mo £1320 Get deal →
Gigaclear
Ultrafast 900 900 Mbps £55/mo £990 Get deal →

Not available at LL12 3

Three,

Data from Ofcom Connected Nations 2025
Prices checked 4 April 2026

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Your broadband guide for LL12 3

Wrexham in Wales is historic industrial Welsh town reinventing itself. The postcode sector LL12_3 sits within this distinctive neighbourhood, offering a unique blend of character and modern amenities. This part of Wrexham is known for its working-class character with modern development, attracting a diverse mix of residents from young professionals to established families. The landscape is defined by Victorian terraces, post-war semis, new builds, which gives the area much of its charm and historical significance. Key landmarks including Wrexham town centre, Acton park, historic pubs have shaped the community's identity over decades. Walking through these streets, you'll encounter independent shops, traditional pubs, and increasingly, modern cafes reflecting the area's evolving demographics. The local economy centres around retail, hospitality, emerging tech sector, providing employment and services that sustain the community. This economic diversity is important when considering broadband needs—professionals working from home, small business owners, and students all have different connectivity requirements, and Wrexham supports all these lifestyles. Housing affordability in this sector varies considerably. Period properties offer character but sometimes present challenges for modern broadband installation, particularly full fibre connections. Newer developments typically have better infrastructure integration. Rental properties are common in some sub-sectors, which can complicate Virgin Media or fibre installation for tenants due to landlord permissions. Transport connectivity typically revolves around local bus services, with some sectors having rail connections. This matters for broadband choice because those with flexible working arrangements and good connectivity can support themselves as genuine remote workers, and high-speed internet becomes essential for daily success. The area has seen growing numbers of remote-first residents who moved here specifically for lifestyle rather than commuting necessity. The demographic mix shapes what broadband matters most. Student areas need low-latency gaming and download capacity. Families need reliability for schooling and entertainment streaming. Small business operators need upload speeds for video calls. Wrexham residents increasingly expect their broadband to be as reliable as water or electricity, not a luxury amenity. The broadband infrastructure serving Wrexham has undergone significant changes over the past five years. Openreach exchanges serving Welsh areas typically serve larger towns with modern FTTP rollout. The local exchange typically routes traffic via regional backhaul to London or Glasgow Internet Exchanges, which affects overall latency profiles for certain online activities. 2023-2025 programme continuing expansion in rural Wales. For this specific sector, FTTP availability currently stands at 50% coverage. This figure is important because gigabit-capable networks—whether FTTP, cable, or emerging alternatives—fundamentally change what users can expect. Those within reach of FTTP can achieve sustained 300+ Mbps on standard residential connections, opening possibilities for multiple simultaneous 4K streams, quick backups, and smooth video calls even with house-wide device usage. Fibre-to-the-Cabinet (FTTC) infrastructure remains the workhorse of Wrexham, delivering superfast broadband (30+ Mbps) to 95% of addresses. These cabinet-based services are delivered via copper final-drop, which introduces distance-dependent performance variability. Homes further than 400 metres from the local cabinet typically see lower speeds, typically 40-80 Mbps for superfast packages despite advertised "up to 145 Mbps" claims. FTTC cabinets exist but show variable performance. Installation of FTTC is generally quick—2-3 weeks—because the cabinet already exists. The tradeoff is that performance depends heavily on your specific distance and copper line quality. Lines affected by interference from local electrical installations or poor external wiring can underperform significantly. Virgin Media's cable network, where available in this sector, follows different routing via hybrid fibre-coaxial infrastructure. Cable typically delivers more consistent speeds in practice than FTTP, though congestion during peak evening hours (7-10 PM) can be noticeable in densely populated areas. Alternative networks are slowly expanding into Wrexham. Community-backed projects and smaller providers occasionally deploy independent FTTP networks, particularly targeting business parks and industrial estates. These typically offer excellent service but may have higher costs than incumbent providers. 5G home broadband viable but weather-dependent in mountainous areas. Three and Vodafone's home broadband services use 5G signals to deliver connectivity without needing to dig up streets. Performance varies substantially based on proximity to masts, line-of-sight, and weather conditions. For backup or bridging temporary gaps, 5G is excellent; as a primary connection for demanding use, it's less reliable. Weather impacts are worth considering. Rural areas with extended periods of rain can experience temporary service degradation, particularly with wireless connections. Heavy snow and ice can affect external infrastructure. These issues are typically short-duration, but if you're in a critical role requiring absolute uptime, it's worth discussing service level agreements with providers. Provider performance in Wrexham LL12_3 varies significantly based on the underlying network infrastructure. Each provider brings different strengths, and choosing correctly for your specific use case is important. Openreach (serving BT, Plusnet, TalkTalk, and others) dominates 95% of this postcode with their FTTP and FTTC networks. These providers differ mainly in customer service and pricing tiers, not the underlying speeds. BT offers the broadest service but often at premium pricing. Plusnet is generally recommended for reliability and support quality, though you'll pay slightly more. TalkTalk competes on price but has had reputation challenges with customer service response times. On these networks, expect typical speeds about 60-70% of advertised rates during peak evening hours. Sky operates its own network in some areas and resells Openreach in others. Sky's appeal is bundling TV with broadband, which works well if you actually use their service. For broadband alone, there's no advantage over direct Openreach access. Sky's technical support is somewhat variable—you'll find enthusiasts praising their help, and frustrated users describing indifference. It's a gamble. Virgin Media, where available in Wrexham, operates via cable infrastructure distinct from FTTP/FTTC. Virgin delivers more consistent speeds than similar-tier FTTP packages due to their superior backhaul typically. However, Virgin is infamous for customer service issues, particularly during installation and around billing disputes. If you're technically capable of troubleshooting your own issues and don't mind fighting them on account problems, Virgin is excellent value. If you require responsive support, look elsewhere. Hyperoptic and Community Fibre, expanding into Wrexham, offer FTTP with genuinely better customer service than most incumbents. You'll typically pay 10-20% more, but the installation process is usually smoother and support is responsive. These providers are particularly worth investigating if you have a bad experience with Virgin or Openreach historically. 5G home broadband from Three, EE, or Vodafone is viable in Wrexham where coverage reaches your specific address. This is genuinely something to check separately for your postcode, as coverage can vary by 500 metres. The appeal is no digging, quick installation, and reasonable speeds (30-80 Mbps typical, up to 300 Mbps in ideal conditions). Downsides include monthly speed variability, weather sensitivity, and potential contention during peak hours. Three performs best for consistency; EE has better coverage; Vodafone sits in the middle. These services suit remote workers doing lighter work, families doing casual streaming, or as a backup connection. For this sector with 50% gigabit coverage and 95% superfast coverage, most residents will find perfectly adequate connectivity through standard Openreach FTTP or cable. The real question isn't "can I get fast broadband?" but rather "which provider handles service issues the way I prefer to deal with them?" Research recent reviews specific to your postcode, not just general provider ratings. Your broadband needs depend entirely on how you use it. Wrexham LL12_3 has sufficient coverage to meet most legitimate requirements, so this section is about optimizing your choice for your specific situation. Gamers need two things: low latency (under 50ms ideally) and consistent speeds (minimum 5-10 Mbps dedicated). FTTP and cable networks in Wrexham typically achieve 15-25 ms latencies to major gaming servers. You'll want at least 10 Mbps of your connection dedicated to gaming, which is trivial on modern broadband. Recommendation: Any provider offering FTTP or cable meets your needs. Avoid 5G home broadband due to latency variability. Remote workers conducting video calls need reliable upload speeds (minimum 3-5 Mbps for HD, 6-8 Mbps for smooth performance with multiple participants). This rules out copper-based FTTC or older ADSL. FTTP, cable, and 5G where available all handle this easily. Recommendation: FTTP or cable via any major provider. If 5G is your only option, test it during a work session before committing—call performance can be inconsistent. Large families with multiple simultaneous users benefit from ample download bandwidth. Netflix recommends 25 Mbps per 4K stream; that's 50 Mbps for two simultaneous 4K streams plus other traffic. FTTP and cable easily exceed this. Recommendation: Aim for at least FTTP delivering 75+ Mbps, or cable at equivalent tiers. Budget providers on FTTC lines may struggle during peak hours. Virgin Media is particularly good value here due to higher typical speeds in practice. Streamers and content creators need reliability above all else. Your viewers don't care about your download speed; they care about stream quality, which depends on consistent upload. Upload speeds are the limiting factor. FTTP upload is typically 20 Mbps (fine for 1080p streaming); cable upload is variable. Recommendation: Pure FTTP is marginally better. Ensure you get "full fibre" (FTTP) not FTTC, even if the salesperson says it's "superfast." Budget seekers should expect to pay £25-35/month for reliable superfast broadband in Wrexham. FTTC packages are cheapest but slowest. FTTP packages at budget-tier providers start around £30. Virgin Media entry pricing is competitive. Recommendation: Compare TalkTalk FTTP versus Plusnet FTTP for value. Avoid contracts longer than 18 months—rates change rapidly. Speed enthusiasts should pursue gigabit packages from Hyperoptic or Virgin Media, typically £50-70/month. Only worth it if you're genuinely moving large files regularly or want absolute headroom for household growth. Living in Wrexham LL12_3 presents specific broadband challenges worth understanding. Many properties were built before modern broadband was envisioned, and this shows in installation difficulty and speed variability. Victorian terraces and older stone-built properties are common here. These homes often have thick walls that substantially reduce WiFi signal strength. A single router in these homes typically covers only 1-2 rooms effectively. Mitigation: Install a WiFi extender or mesh system (£100-200) in a central location. Mesh systems are superior to traditional extenders because they maintain faster speeds throughout the property. Position the main router as high and centrally as possible—not in the hallway under stairs, despite what sounds logical. Peak time congestion typically occurs 7-10 PM, especially on Friday and Saturday evenings. FTTC networks particularly suffer here because all homes in a cabinet area share the same backhaul capacity. If you're doing something speed-sensitive during these hours, you'll notice degradation. Recommendation: Schedule important uploads or downloads for off-peak hours when possible. Video call performance should remain acceptable even during peak times on modern broadband. Installation delays are common in this region. BT can take 4-6 weeks; Virgin Media takes 2-3 weeks. Budget time accordingly if you're moving house. Some engineers claim "no phone lines in the building" as reason for refusal—this is sometimes legitimate network constraint, sometimes lazy surveying. Push back and demand a proper survey. Weather rarely causes permanent damage to modern networks, but heavy rain does cause temporary performance dips on wireless systems. These are typically brief (minutes to hours). External wiring quality varies enormously. Visit the junction box on your property and check for obvious damage or corrosion. Damaged wiring should be replaced by the network operator free of charge. Many installation issues stem from external wiring that "works" but is poor quality. Property specifics matter more than general postcode reputation. Two houses 200 metres apart on different sides of a hill can have drastically different actual speeds from the same network. Always check "availability checker" tools specific to your exact address, not just your postcode. Q: What's the fastest broadband available in Wrexham LL12_3? A: Gigabit packages from Hyperoptic (where available) or virgin Media deliver sustained 300-700 Mbps. For most people, FTTP packages at £35-45/month delivering 75-150 Mbps are sufficient. Speed alone doesn't correlate with quality—consistency matters more. Q: Is full fibre FTTP available in LL12_3? A: FTTP is available to 50% of addresses here. Check your specific postcode with BT checker, Hyperoptic, or Community Fibre. Don't rely on postcode checkers that claim FTTP availability for your sector—get your actual address verified. Q: Which provider is best for Wrexham? A: For reliability: Plusnet (via Openreach). For value: Plusnet or TalkTalk. For customer service: Hyperoptic if available, otherwise Plusnet. For speed: Virgin Media or Hyperoptic. Most users are happy with any Openreach reseller (BT, Plusnet, TalkTalk) because the network quality is consistent—differences are in support. Q: How long does installation take in Wrexham? A: Expect 3-6 weeks from order to installation with BT/Plusnet/TalkTalk. Virgin Media typically faster (2-3 weeks). Hyperoptic and smaller providers vary. Installation usually takes a few hours once the engineer arrives. Q: Can I get Virgin Media in LL12_3? A: Virgin Media cable is available to roughly 95% of Wrexham, but this understates Virgin's true coverage here because they layer different speeds. Check virginspoiler.co.uk or contact Virgin directly. Cable availability is patchier than FTTP. Q: Is 5G home broadband available in LL12_3? A: Potentially—check EE, Three, and Vodafone home broadband coverage checkers separately. Coverage varies dramatically by location within postcode. Contact the provider with your address for accurate availability. 5G works as an alternative, not necessarily as good as fibre, but it's worth checking if fibre is unavailable.

📍 About broadband in Wrexham

Wrexham is served by the LL12 postcode area in Wales.

Average speed in LL12: 329 Mbps
Compared to UK average: 311% faster

Other sectors in LL12

View all LL12 sectors →

Nearby areas