Check speeds, providers and install dates before you move








We compare broadband deals for Addlestone at your exact postcode, then show the offers that are actually live before move-in day. Around Station Road, Woburn Hill and Marsh Lane, line types can change from one address to the next, so a postcode check matters more than a general area search. Our team checks availability across major UK providers, including BT, Sky, Virgin Media, TalkTalk, Vodafone and EE, so you can see the main options in one place.
Addlestone has a mixed housing stock, and that affects broadband choices. Clifton Gardens off Woburn Hill is still under construction with completion expected in 2028, Aviator Park on Station Road KT15 2PG is being converted into 154 residential units, and Weybridge Park Estate has active park home listings in KT15, so not every home will use the same network path. If you are moving into a newer build or a converted flat, full fibre may already be there. Older streets can still sit on FTTC cabinets, which is why we always check the line at the new address before you place the order.

30-80 Mbps
Typical FTTC speed
100 Mbps-1 Gbps+
Full fibre speed tier
100 Mbps-1 Gbps+
Cable speed tier
+7.3%
Wider outcode asking price trend
3
Active new-build sites in research
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
The first thing we check is the line type at your exact address. In KT15, older homes near Marsh Lane can still be on FTTC, while newer schemes such as Aviator Park on Station Road KT15 2PG are more likely to see faster options sooner. That split matters because FTTC usually lands in the 30-80 Mbps range, which is fine for lighter use but can feel tight in a busy household.
Full fibre changes the picture. FTTP can reach 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps+, and Virgin Media cable can also run from 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps+ where it is available, so both are worth checking for a house on Woburn Hill or a flat near Station Road. We only quote average speeds, not best-case promises, because real-world performance depends on the network in your street and the package you pick.
Some Addlestone addresses will see Openreach-based deals from BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Plusnet, Vodafone and EE. Others may find a Virgin Media line, which uses coax rather than Openreach copper or fibre-to-the-premise access. That is why the postcode check comes before the price comparison, not after it.
Illustrative monthly prices only, not live quotes. Actual offers vary by provider, contract length and postcode.
A 35 Mbps line is usually fine for 1-2 streamers, basic browsing and working from home on lighter days. It can fit a smaller flat in Addlestone, especially where the property footprint is modest and there are only a few devices online at once. Once the household grows, the comfort level drops quickly.
A 100 Mbps package is the safer middle ground for a home with 3-4 people, 4K streaming and gaming in the evening. Move up to 500 Mbps or more if you have large file uploads, several gamers, or a setup in a place such as Weybridge Park Estate where multiple rooms may be running devices at the same time. Speed is not the only factor, but it is the one that usually gets noticed first.

Start with the new Addlestone address, not the old one. A flat on Station Road and a house off Woburn Hill can show very different results, even inside KT15.
Compare the packages that are live at the address, then choose the balance of speed, contract length and price tier that fits the move budget.
Arrange the engineer visit for after you get the keys, not before. Completion times can slip on the day, so the safest slot is the day after handover.
If the new home already has an active Openreach line, activation can often be quicker. Cable to Openreach, or Openreach to cable, usually means a fresh install.
Ask for the router to arrive before move-in where possible. That gives you time to plug it in, test the signal and chase any order issues before the boxes are fully unpacked.
Do not book broadband for the day of completion. The legal handover can come late in the day, and if your solicitor is still waiting on final confirmation you can end up with an empty slot and no working line. The day after is safer.
Addlestone has a mix of older roads and newer schemes, and that shows up in broadband availability. A property near Marsh Lane may still rely on an FTTC cabinet, while a new build at Clifton Gardens on the former Clifton Garden Centre site at Woburn Hill is the kind of address that may be nearer to a full fibre rollout. Aviator Park on Station Road KT15 2PG is another good example of how the local housing stock keeps changing.
Not every part of KT15 will move at the same pace. Park homes on Weybridge Park Estate, a flat conversion on Station Road and a semi on a quieter side road can all return different results, even if they are close on a map. We check the exact line type rather than guessing, because a cabinet-fed copper line can sit at 30-80 Mbps while a full fibre or cable address can jump to 100 Mbps-1 Gbps+.
homedata.co.uk records show median asking prices in the wider outcode including Addlestone are up 7.3% over 12 months, which matters if you are juggling moving costs and monthly bills at the same time. That is one reason many movers want a broadband quote ready before completion day. It keeps the post-move admin under control, especially when the new place is still full of boxes and the solicitor is still sending final paperwork.
New-build activity also changes the picture. Clifton Gardens is due for completion in 2028, Aviator Park is under construction, and smaller sites such as 1 Marsh Lane KT15 1UL can bring fresh demand onto local networks. When a street gets several new connections in a short period, the best package can be different from the one next door, so postcode matching is the part that saves time.
Openreach switches between Openreach-based providers are usually quicker than a fresh install. If you are moving from BT to Sky, or from TalkTalk to Vodafone, the line can often be activated with less fuss once the address checks out. That is useful for a move into a home near Station Road or Woburn Hill where you want Wi-Fi up fast.
Changing from Virgin Media to an Openreach provider, or the other way round, is a different job. Those changes usually need a new install, and that is why we tell movers in Addlestone to book around 2 weeks ahead where they can. It gives the engineer time to visit, the router time to arrive and the new line time to go live before the first night in the house.

Start with the full postcode for the new address, then check the line type before you compare packages. A home on Station Road can show a different result from a house on Marsh Lane, even though both sit in KT15. We use that postcode check to filter the live deals first, so you only see what can actually be ordered.
Sometimes, yes. If your current provider covers the new home and the line type matches, the move can be simple, especially on Openreach-based services. If you are changing from cable to Openreach, or from Openreach to cable, it is more likely to need a fresh install.
A 35 Mbps package works for lighter use, such as one or two people streaming and browsing. A 100 Mbps line is a safer choice for a household with several devices, while 500 Mbps or more suits heavy file transfers, gaming and busy work-from-home setups in places like Aviator Park or Weybridge Park Estate.
Yes, many major providers offer social tariffs for eligible households, usually around £15-£20 a month. They are usually available to customers on Universal Credit, ESA, JSA or Pension Credit. If you think you qualify, check the provider’s current terms before you place the order.
Most broadband contracts run for 18 or 24 months, and early exit charges can apply if you cancel before the term ends. That matters if your move is only temporary or if you are planning another change soon after completion. Check the remaining term before you switch, so the final bill does not come as a shock.
Not always. FTTP and Virgin Media cable do not need the old copper phone line in the same way FTTC does. If your new place near Woburn Hill or Marsh Lane has full fibre, you may be able to skip the traditional landline entirely.
In many parts of KT15, yes, but it depends on the exact property. Newer developments and some upgraded streets can get FTTP, while older cabinets may still serve FTTC speeds in the 30-80 Mbps range. We always check the postcode so you know whether full fibre is live before you order.
Book for the day after completion if you can. Completion can slip later than expected, and that is awkward if an engineer is already booked and you do not have the keys. A one-day buffer is usually the safest option.
From £45
Arrange moving help for a flat on Station Road or a house near Woburn Hill.
From £99
Compare solicitors for a purchase in KT15 and keep the move moving.
From £0
Review mortgage options before you reserve a home in Addlestone.
From £350
Order a survey for a house, flat or park home before you exchange.
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Check speeds, providers and install dates before you move
Compare Broadband DealsMoving home? Don't lose your connection.
Compare broadband deals at your new address.
Moving home? Don't lose your connection.
Compare broadband deals at your new address.





Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.