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NextImg:Mapped: The 48,000 worst places to live in the UK for broadband speed

Struggling with painfully slow internet speeds? .

According to new analysis of data from the Office for National Statistics, 48,000 British homes are still stranded with broadband speeds below 10Mbps. Regulator Ofcom defines a "decent broadband" connection as having a minimum of speed of 10Mbps and an upload speed of 1Mbps.

Below this threshold, you can be cut off from essential online services that most in the UK take for granted.

heatmap showing the areas of the UK with bad broadband connections

Using data provided by the Office for National Statistics and Ofcom, the team at Broadband Savvy were able to pinpoint the location of the 48,000 premises in the UK with terrible broadband connections

BROADBAND SAVVY

While 48,000 premises might not sound like a lot, it's still potentially 100,000 people cut-off from this essential service – leaving them without the opportunities to work, study, and socialise that the internet provides.

Netflix recommends a minimum speed of 3Mbps or higher to watch in 720p HD, while video call applications like Zoom can function with as little as 0.6Mbps, but need much more for a smoother experience, especially when sharing a screen, broadcasting and viewing in HD quality, or juggling mutiple callers. In busy households, with multiple people downloading software updates, backing up their photos and data online, making video calls, or streaming on-demand shows from BBC iPlayer, ITVX, or Netflix... a download speed of 10Mbps will soon collapse under the pressure.

Sky has — with download speeds of 150Mbps. That's more than fast enough for multiple people to watch Netflix, back-up their photos to the cloud, and make video calls under the same roof without any buffering. There's even a minimum download speed of 100Mbps, but this Black Friday-like saving won't be around for long!

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Elderly people among this cohort are also vulnerable to isolation as .

The situation in the UK is particularly dire if you live in rural Scotland or Wales, where you're up to 4.6x more likely to have unusable broadband compared to England, the team from Broadband Savvy concluded. The team mapped out every residential premises stuck with slow internet below the "decent broadband" defined by Ofcom to visualise broadband dead spots across the UK.

Looking at the four nations, this is how the broadband dead spots break down...

  1. (0.41%, 1 in 244 premises below 10 Mbps)
  2. (0.36%, 1 in 278 premises below 10 Mbps)
  3. (0.21%, 1 in 476 premises below 10 Mbps)
  4. (0.09%, 1 in 1,111 premises below 10 Mbps)
Efforts have been made to connect more premises to future-proof, full-fibre broadband. The most recent figures from Openreach reveal that .

When it comes to local authorities with the biggest share of bad broadband, here are the results uncovered by the Broadband Savvy research.

It clearly demonstrates that unusable broadband is more common in rural areas, as shown by the poor performance of Wales and Scotland compared to England.

  1. – 385/11,920 premises below 10 Mbps (3.23%)
  2. – 282/11,852 premises below 10 Mbps (2.38%)
  3. – 1,394/64,019 premises below 10 Mbps (2.18%)
  4. – 952/49,877 premises below 10 Mbps (1.91%)
  5. – 629/34,906 premises below 10 Mbps (1.80%)

heatmap showing the local authorities in UK with bad broadband connections

Local authorities with the highest concentration of homes with poor broadband connections

BROADBAND SAVVY

Discussing the findings, Tom Paton, founder of Broadband Savvy, told GB News: "Many rural communities around the UK are still stuck with super slow broadband at the moment. While 86% of UK homes can now get ultrafast gigabit internet, we estimate around 100,000 people have been left behind, with no idea when they will get usable broadband at their address."


"The remote regions of Scotland and Wales are by far the worst places for broadband in the UK. If you live somewhere like the Shetland Islands, your best bet to get decent internet is to use a satellite service like Starlink."