Broadband in NE30 8
North Tyneside, England · 19 deals available
Cheapest
£18.00/mo
NOW Broadband
Best Value
£25/mo
Vodafone 73 Mbps
Fastest
74 Mbps
EE
Providers
10
available here
📡 Infrastructure at NE30 8
Max Download
1075 Mbps
Max Upload
171 Mbps
Technologies
FTTP
Cable
FTTC
Exchange
North Tyneside
78% Gigabit
99% Superfast
Ofcom verified
Our top picks for NE30 8
Best Value
View deal →
Vodafone
Superfast 2
£25
/month
73
Mbps
24
months
£600
total
Good speeds
Pro II router
Price lock
24 month contract
Fastest
View deal →
EE
Fibre Max
£32
/month
74
Mbps
24
months
£768
total
Data boost
Apple TV included
24 month lock-in
Cheapest
View deal →
NOW Broadband
Fab Fibre
£18
/month
36
Mbps
0
months
£216
total
No contract
Cheapest fibre option
Cancel anytime
Slower speeds
Basic router
All 19 deals in NE30 8
| Provider | Package | Speed | Price | Contract | Total Cost | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Fab Fibre | 36 Mbps | £18/mo | £216 | Get deal → | |
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Super Fibre | 63 Mbps | £22/mo | £264 | Get deal → | |
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Superfast 1 | 38 Mbps | £22/mo | £528 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre Broadband | 36 Mbps | £23.5/mo | £282 | Get deal → | |
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Unlimited Fibre | 66 Mbps | £24.99/mo | £600 | Get deal → | |
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Fast Broadband Plus | 67 Mbps | £24.99/mo | £450 | Get deal → | |
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Superfast 1 | 38 Mbps | £25/mo | £600 | Get deal → | |
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Superfast 2 | 73 Mbps | £25/mo | £600 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre 65 | 67 Mbps | £26/mo | £468 | Get deal → | |
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Superfast | 59 Mbps | £27/mo | £486 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre | 36 Mbps | £27/mo | £648 | Get deal → | |
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Superfast 2 | 67 Mbps | £27/mo | £648 | Get deal → | |
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Fast Fibre Broadband | 67 Mbps | £27.5/mo | £330 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre Essential | 36 Mbps | £27.99/mo | £672 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre 1 | 50 Mbps | £29.99/mo | £720 | Get deal → | |
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Unlimited Fibre 1 | 36 Mbps | £31.99/mo | £384 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre Max | 74 Mbps | £32/mo | £768 | Get deal → | |
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Fibre 2 | 74 Mbps | £32.99/mo | £792 | Get deal → | |
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Unlimited Fibre 2 | 66 Mbps | £35.99/mo | £432 | Get deal → |
Not available at NE30 8
Virgin Media, Hyperoptic, Community Fibre, Gigaclear, Three,
Data from Ofcom Connected Nations 2025
Prices checked 4 April 2026
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Your broadband guide for NE30 8
North Tyneside stretches along the Tyne Valley with a fascinating blend of riverside industrial heritage and modern residential communities. The area encompasses towns like Tynemouth with its iconic priory and beaches, Whitley Bay's distinctive Victorian entertainment culture, and Wallsend's deep shipbuilding roots. The geography here is distinctive – you've got the Tyne estuary to the east bringing bracing sea air and occasional coastal weather challenges, while inland settlements cluster around the valley with their own distinct characters. Housing stock varies tremendously, from Victorian terraces in older neighbourhoods to 1970s suburbs and newer developments. The demographics skew working-class to middle-class, with strong community identity tied to traditional industries. You'll find established families, young professionals attracted to reasonable house prices, and retirees enjoying the coastal elements. The average household values broadband reliability highly because of the rural-urban mix. Openreach infrastructure here is respectable but inconsistent across the sector. The company has invested heavily in main population centres with FTTP reaching approximately 50% of premises – that's the actual gigabit-capable fibre to the premises standard. This means half the area enjoys genuine ultra-fast connectivity potential, though the reality depends on takeup and provisioning. Where FTTP hasn't reached, FTTC delivers the standard superfast threshold at around 67-80 Mbps – perfectly adequate for most but not spectacular. The 95% superfast broadband coverage tells the real story: nearly the entire sector can access proper broadband above 30 Mbps, eliminating the old rural complaints about unusable speeds. Cable infrastructure from Virgin Media exists in the more densely populated western sections, particularly around Wallsend and Whitley Bay corridors, creating genuine three-way competition in those areas. 5G mobile coverage from all four major networks has rolled out reasonably well, particularly from EE and Vodafone, making home 5G broadband genuinely viable as a backup or primary solution. Building construction here – lots of solid 1950s-70s suburban homes – actually helps with signal propagation. Altafibre has been laying independent fibre in scattered locations. BT's performance here is consistently solid but unremarkable. Their FTTP speeds hit advertised figures reliably, averaging 145-150 Mbps real-world on standard gigabit packages. Customer service is adequate but impersonal. Their provided router is functional but uninspiring. Sky operates well through their own copper and cable acquisitions. Where they've got FTTP access, speeds match advertising and they've built a reputation for decent customer support. Their streaming bundles appeal to families. Virgin Media dominates cable territory with genuinely impressive performance – real speeds hitting 350-450 Mbps on top packages – but service interruptions do happen. EE's broadband offering is underrated here with competitive fibre performance and growing market share among families. TalkTalk remains an option but offers nothing distinctive. For gamers, FTTP with any provider is non-negotiable – it's the only way to guarantee the sub-20ms latency that online shooters demand. Remote workers should aim for FTTP but FTTC with wired connection works if stable. Families streaming multiple devices should reject anything below 50 Mbps promised speed. Streamers creating content need FTTP with upload speeds since FTTC tops out around 10 Mbps. Budget households can manage on FTTC for basic use. Speed obsessives must go Virgin cable or FTTP gigabit. The biggest local challenge is weather-related congestion. During winter storms off the North Sea, some areas see packet loss spikes and latency creep. Building construction helps and hurts – solid Victorian walls provide excellent WiFi shielding if positioned carefully. Peak evening congestion (6-10pm) affects shared bandwidth, particularly on FTTC. Router placement is critical – poor placement buys immediate 30-40% speed penalties. Coastal location and occasional flooding do create brief service interruptions. Can I get gigabit speeds? Only about 50% have FTTP available. Is FTTC really slow? For video calls and single streaming, it handles fine. Multiple simultaneous uses suffer. Can I rely on 5G home broadband? Yes if in decent signal area. What's typical contract length? Usually 24 months minimum. Should I upgrade my router? Probably yes. Which provider has best customer service? Sky rates highest for North Tyneside specifically.
📍 About broadband in North Tyneside
North Tyneside is served by the NE30 postcode area in England.
Average speed in NE30: 55 Mbps
Compared to UK average: 31% slower