Home
 » ISP News » 
Sponsored Links

Nexfibre Publish Q2 2025 UK Full Fibre Broadband Build Update

Thursday, Aug 7th, 2025 (7:49 am) - Score 3,440
nexfibre-Q2-2025-UK-full-fibre-broadband-build-map

Network operator nexfibre, which shares some of its parentage with ISP partner Virgin Media (O2), has published their latest quarterly (Q2 2025) build update and confirmed that their new 10Gbps capable Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) broadband network now covers 2.3 million UK premises. But its future remains uncertain.

Just to recap. Back in 2022 Telefónica, Liberty Global and InfraVia Capital Partners setup nexfibre as a new £4.5bn joint venture (here), which aimed to deploy an open access (wholesale) full fibre network to reach “up to” 7m UK homes (starting with 5m by 2026) in areas NOT served by Virgin Media’s own network of 16m+ premises. The funding reflects £3.3bn of fully underwritten financing and up to £1.4bn in equity commitments.

NOTE: Virgin Media is the only major ISP on nexfibre’s network via an “exclusive partnership” (here), although giffgaff are currently conducting a customer pilot.

However, as existing readers will already know, nexfibre’s roll-out plan recently suffered a significant blow after Telefonica launched a Strategic Review of their global business (here and here). The decision has since resulted in nexfibre scaling back their roll-out – now aiming to reach just 2.5m premises in 2025 (down from c.3m) – and Virgin Media scrapping their related NetCo plans for opening up their existing consumer broadband network to wholesale (here).

Advertisement

The latest Q2 2025 build update from nexfibre continues to reflect this change and confirms that their full fibre network has now reached 2.3 million premises as ready for service (up from 2.2m in Q1). Much uncertainty now exists in the build plans for 2026 and beyond, which will probably only be answered once Telefonica and Liberty Global have decided on the best way forward. Not that you’d know it from listening to the company’s boss, where the focus continues to hint at a switch toward consolidation (waters where CityFibre and possibly Netomnia are also playing).

Rajiv Datta, CEO of nexfibre, said:

“nexfibre continues to make substantial progress in bringing full-fibre broadband to underserved communities across the UK. With coverage now exceeding 2.3 million premises, we are among the country’s largest alternative fibre operators.

Our optimised build plan remains on track, driven by the agility and commitment of our unique ecosystem of dedicated team members and partners. Together, we are delivering a technologically-advanced, XGS-PON-only network designed to serve generations to come. This long-term focus informs our view of the need for sustainable, nationwide competition in the fibre access market, which today is fragmented and subscale, yielding constrained business models and substantial financial stress.

Backed by strong investors and significant financial resources, nexfibre remains committed to creating a wholesale fibre access platform that will play a key role as the market moves toward meaningful consolidation and a structure capable of unlocking the full potential of world-class digital infrastructure.”

Share with Twitter
Share with Linkedin
Share with Facebook
Share with Reddit
Share with Pinterest
Mark-Jackson
By Mark Jackson
Mark is a professional technology writer, IT consultant and computer engineer from Dorset (England), he also founded ISPreview in 1999 and enjoys analysing the latest telecoms and broadband developments. Find me on X (Twitter), Mastodon, Facebook, BlueSky, Threads.net and .
Search ISP News
Search ISP Listings
Search ISP Reviews
Comments
19 Responses

Advertisement

  1. Avatar photo The Facts says:

    nexfibre.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/nexfibre-Q225-coverageupdate-web.pdf

    1. Mark-Jackson Mark Jackson says:

      Already linked, in bold, in the article above.

  2. Avatar photo Big Dave says:

    “Our optimised build plan remains on track”. Well since you’ve already admitted your build has been scaled back it obviously isn’t, is it?

    1. Avatar photo Jonny says:

      “Optimised” in this instance probably means “reduced”

  3. Avatar photo Rory McCune says:

    The weird thing is that their map and coverage list don’t match up. The specific example I can see is that the map clearly shows current coverage in fife around St Andrews and west to Cupar, but if you look at the list of covered towns, Cupar isn’t on there either for current or 2025 coverage.

  4. Avatar photo C says:

    They still have yet to integrate UPPs existing footprint into their rollout plan

  5. Avatar photo Gavin says:

    They should have put mustang(?) as their priority, upgrading existing connections.

    Because they would likely, imho, get more money back.

    1. Avatar photo Ear to the ground says:

      Gavin,
      For reference, Project Mustang has been known as FibreUp (FiUp) for some time now.
      They would have benefitted from the NetCo split in the form of investment, specifically to ramp up
      numbers. Although that won’t be happening for the foreseeable, FiUp will continue at apace.
      They are installing new customers on the back of the project already.

  6. Avatar photo rich says:

    Gig5 when?? 😀

  7. Avatar photo Far2329Light says:

    Is Rajiv Datta’s comment “.. nexfibre remains committed to creating a wholesale fibre access platform …” a contradiction of the comments made by the Telefonica CEO, or is this an indication of a more nuanced approach from VMo2 to offering a wholesale platform to the market?

    1. Mark-Jackson Mark Jackson says:

      Only the NetCo is scrapped (Virgin’s own network), which is legally separate from nexfibre (that is not stopped). Confusing, I know, but that’s the way VMO2 want to do it..

    2. Avatar photo Big Dave says:

      I’m guessing that id VMO2 were afraid that if they just expanded their own network they would be classed by Ofcom as having “significant market power” and come under similar regulatory scrutiny that Openreach does. Creating a separate company is just a workaround.

    3. Avatar photo Ivor says:

      there are some deployment choices that dovetail nicely with VM’s existing network, which is curious for a business that’s supposed to be separate to it.

      The locations in Devon are all clustered around Exeter, which is a VM cabled city, though I believe the headend is down the road in Newton Abbot.

      There are actual VM locations on the map too. Presumably they’re avoiding any overlap of the existing HFC and VM’s plans to upgrade that to FTTP as well.

    4. Avatar photo Far2329Light says:

      @Mark Jackson: Indeed, which just raises questions about the future of the VMO2 joint venture around the “heritage” network infrastructure if it is considered unsuitable to be used to offer a wholesale product.

    5. Avatar photo Far2329Light says:

      @Big Dave:

      That indeed was their intention, and comments from the owners suggest it still is; thus, as you say, the separation of the infrastructure side would be a good move.

      I am wondering now if Telefonica’s internal review and Liberty Global’s retrenchment have brought into doubt the cost-effectiveness of upgrading the heritage network. What if they are now thinking they could instead achieve their objective by the acquisition of a major network provider rather than going through the effort of building an alternative to their DOCSIS network?

    6. Avatar photo Far2329Light says:

      @ Ivor: Looking at the Thinkbroadband maps, I can not see any nexfibre deployments in Exeter itself. Nexfibre appears to be focused on the conurbations surrounding Exeter, which would be a reasonable move.

  8. Avatar photo Scott says:

    Those splodges of green on the map are very generous.

    They cover an entire region when in reality it’s a small estate next to me.

  9. Avatar photo Far2329Light says:

    It is of note that there is relatively little overlap between CityFibre and Nexfibre deployments, while CityFibre has cabled numerous areas where VMO2 has a heritage network. This might be expected overlap, based on a reasonable assumption of higher returns in urban areas, but it also offers a quick-win around migration to FTTP if an acquisition was now thought to be a more cost-effective option.

  10. Avatar photo anonymous says:

    lol still not included
    towns in the middle of nowhere added, VM HFC town with 150,000 people and almost full VM coverage and nada for years now oh well thank god for altnets

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NOTE: Your comment may not appear instantly (it may take several hours) due to static caching and moderation checks by the anti-spam system. Please be patient. We will reject comments that spam, troll, post via known fake IP/proxy servers or fall foul of our Online Safety and Content Policy.
Javascript must be enabled to post (most browsers do this automatically)

Privacy Notice: Please note that news comments are anonymous, which means that we do NOT require you to enter any real personal details to post a message and display names can be almost anything you like (provided they do not contain offensive language or impersonate a real persons legal name). By clicking to submit a post you agree to storing your entries for comment content, display name, IP and email in our database, for as long as the post remains live.

Only the submitted name and comment will be displayed in public, while the rest will be kept private (we will never share this outside of ISPreview, regardless of whether the data is real or fake). This comment system uses submitted IP, email and website address data to spot abuse and spammers. All data is transferred via an encrypted (https secure) session.
Cheap BIG ISPs for 100Mbps+
Community Fibre UK ISP Logo
200Mbps
Gift: None
Youfibre UK ISP Logo
Youfibre £23.99
150Mbps
Gift: None
Plusnet UK ISP Logo
Plusnet £24.99
145Mbps
Gift: £145 Reward Card
Vodafone UK ISP Logo
Vodafone £25.00
150Mbps
Gift: None
Sky UK ISP Logo
Sky £25.00
100Mbps
Gift: None
Large Availability | View All
Cheap Unlimited Mobile SIMs
Talkmobile UK ISP Logo
Talkmobile £11.95
Contract: 12 Months
Data: 120GB
iD Mobile UK ISP Logo
iD Mobile £16.00
Contract: 24 Months
Data: Unlimited
Smarty UK ISP Logo
Smarty £17.50
Contract: 1 Month
Data: Unlimited
Sky UK ISP Logo
Sky £19.00
Contract: 12 Months
Data: Unlimited
ASDA Mobile UK ISP Logo
ASDA Mobile £19.00
Contract: 24 Months
Data: Unlimited
Cheapest ISPs for 100Mbps+
Gigaclear UK ISP Logo
Gigaclear £19.00
300Mbps
Gift: None
Community Fibre UK ISP Logo
200Mbps
Gift: None
toob UK ISP Logo
toob £22.00
150Mbps
Gift: None
BeFibre UK ISP Logo
BeFibre £22.00
200Mbps
Gift: None
Zzoomm UK ISP Logo
Zzoomm £22.00
200Mbps
Gift: None
Large Availability | View All
Promotion
Sponsored

Copyright © 1999 to Present - ISPreview.co.uk - All Rights Reserved - Terms , Privacy and Cookie Policy , Links , Website Rules , Contact
Mastodon