In DE55 many homes still run FTTC from the street cabinet while others reach full fibre, so start with your address, not the advert. Postcode-checked deals for move-in.








Moving into Alfreton usually means sorting broadband early, especially if your completion date is close. We compare deals across major UK providers and check what is actually live at your new DE55 postcode before you pick a package. That matters because one street can have full fibre options and the next can still rely on copper from the cabinet. Our team keeps the process practical, speed first, price second, with clear setup dates so you are not left waiting after move-in.
Local data is patchy, so we focus on what can be confirmed before you commit. home.co.uk records show no sold price data available for Alfreton in February 2026, and that is a reminder that postcode-level services need live availability checks rather than assumptions based on nearby addresses. In DE55, the network mix can include Openreach-based services, Virgin Media’s separate cable network in some pockets, plus possible alternative fibre operators depending on the exact property. We run the address check first, then show the deals you can order now at that address.

DE55
Primary postcode area covered on this page
May 2026
Last local asking-price reference month
30-80 Mbps
Typical Openreach FTTC range used for planning
100 Mbps-1 Gbps+
Typical full fibre package range used for planning
100 Mbps-1 Gbps+
Typical Virgin Media cable package range
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Start with the line type at your address, not the headline advert on a national campaign. In DE55, many homes can still sit on FTTC, which runs fibre to the street cabinet and copper into the property, and those plans usually land in the 30-80 Mbps bracket on average. That is enough for normal streaming, browsing, and video calls in smaller households. It can feel slower in busy evening periods, especially if several people are online at once.
Full fibre, often shown as FTTP, is a step up because fibre reaches the building directly. Packages usually begin around 100 Mbps and can rise to 1 Gbps or more, depending on provider and infrastructure at the exact Alfreton postcode. Upload speed is often much better than FTTC, which helps if you work from home and move large files. Latency tends to be lower too, useful for gaming and real-time calls.
Cable broadband from Virgin Media is separate from Openreach, so availability can differ even within the same DE55 patch. If your new property can get cable, you may see 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps+ products with short lead times in some cases, but fresh installs still need engineer capacity. If cable is not live at the property, we can check Openreach-based providers such as BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Plusnet, EE, NOW Broadband, and Vodafone on the same quote journey. The key point is simple, Alfreton options depend on the exact address record.
Alternative networks can appear in parts of Derbyshire over time, including CityFibre, Hyperoptic, Gigaclear, B4RN, Trooli, and Community Fibre in other UK regions, but coverage is never universal by town name alone. We do not assume any of these in Alfreton without a live postcode result. That avoids failed orders and delayed installs. You get packages you can actually place today.
Illustrative market bands for budgeting only, checked against live postcode quoting patterns in May 2026. Prices change often and are not fixed offers.
Pick speed by household use, not by fear of missing out. For many DE55 move-ins, around 35 Mbps can handle one or two regular streamers plus normal browsing, as long as nobody is uploading heavy files all day. If your usage is light, this can keep monthly cost lower while still covering everyday tasks. It is often the right starting point for a single occupant or a couple.
Around 100 Mbps is a common sweet spot in Alfreton homes with three or four people sharing the line. This tier usually copes better with 4K streaming, gaming updates, cloud backups, and work calls happening in parallel. It also gives headroom for smart TVs, consoles, and security devices joining the network later. If your move includes a new work-from-home setup, this tier is often the safer baseline.
Go to 500 Mbps or faster when usage is heavy and constant. Think multiple gamers, frequent large uploads, and several people in full-time remote work at the same address. The monthly price rises, so it only makes sense when the extra speed is used most days. We can show both lower-cost and higher-speed deals side by side so you can choose with clear trade-offs.

We run a live address search for your DE55 property first. This confirms which networks are active at that exact premises record, not just the town name.
Compare monthly cost, contract term, setup fee, and expected speed band. We help you balance budget and usage so you do not overpay for unused bandwidth.
Select an installation date for the day after legal completion where possible. This helps avoid failed appointments if keys are delayed on completion day.
If the property already has a working Openreach line, switching between Openreach-based providers can be quicker than a full new install. Our team flags this during the order path.
Most providers post the router ahead of activation. We track timing so equipment arrives before or just after you move into the Alfreton address.
Book your broadband install for the day after completion, not completion day itself. Key release can slip late in the afternoon, and engineer windows are often fixed. A one-day buffer reduces the risk of a missed visit and rebooking delay.
Alfreton coverage planning should be done at address level inside DE55, not by town-wide assumptions. The research dataset for this page confirms that home.co.uk shows no sold price data for Alfreton in February 2026, and that gap is a good reminder that some local datasets lag in reporting. Broadband records can also vary by premise status, especially for new occupancies and recently updated address files. We handle this by running checks directly against the target property reference before you place an order.
In practical terms, Alfreton movers should expect a mixed network picture. Some addresses will have straightforward Openreach options across BT, Sky, TalkTalk, EE, Plusnet, NOW Broadband, and Vodafone, while others may also show Virgin Media cable or limited full fibre choices depending on street-level infrastructure. A few homes still rely on older copper last-mile segments and may not hit higher headline tiers. That is where package selection should match realistic speed bands rather than marketing maxima.
Rural-edge and lower-density pockets around the wider DE55 footprint can show lower FTTC results if the cabinet distance is longer. That does not block good service, but it changes what is sensible to buy. Paying for a premium tier on a constrained line often brings little benefit. We normally suggest starting with the fastest confirmed estimate your line can hold consistently, then upgrading only if your real usage proves higher.
Installation lead times can also differ by network type. Openreach-to-Openreach migrations are often simpler, while cable-to-Openreach or Openreach-to-cable usually means a fresh installation path and a longer booking window. New tenants and buyers in Alfreton should also check contract length before ordering, because 18-month and 24-month terms are common and early exit charges can bite if you move again soon. We show those contract details clearly before checkout.
Switching between Openreach-based providers at the same DE55 address is often the fastest path when a working line is already in place. In many cases, activation can happen quickly once the order is confirmed and previous service is ceased correctly. Timing still depends on provider workflow and property line status. We check that status before we recommend a date.
Moving from cable to Openreach, or from Openreach to cable, is different. Those changes usually require a new install visit and should be booked around two weeks ahead where possible. The extra time covers engineer slots, line work, and router dispatch. It is a small planning step that can save a week of mobile hotspot usage after move-in.
If you are still in contract at your current home, we can help you compare move options against new-customer deals. Some providers let you transfer, some charge ERCs if service cannot be moved, and some offer better value on a fresh contract at the new address. We lay out those choices so you can decide based on total cost, not just monthly price.

We run a live postcode and address check before showing deals. That matters in DE55 because two nearby properties can have different network options due to line records and infrastructure type. You will see only the providers and speeds that can be ordered at that exact property reference.
Usually yes, but it depends on your provider, contract term, and whether the same network serves the new address. If service cannot be supplied at the new property, early exit charges may still apply under many contracts. We can help you compare the transfer option against taking a new deal so the full cost is clear.
As a starting point, around 35 Mbps can cover light use in smaller households. Around 100 Mbps is often a better fit for homes with multiple users, 4K streaming, and gaming. For heavy remote work, frequent large uploads, or several gamers, 500 Mbps+ can be worth paying for if that speed is available at your address.
Yes, many major providers offer social tariffs for eligible households, often for people receiving Universal Credit, ESA, JSA, or Pension Credit. Typical pricing is often around £15-£20 per month, but exact terms differ by provider and can change. We can flag eligible providers during comparison so you can apply directly with the right evidence.
Most mainstream broadband contracts are 18 months or 24 months. Leaving early normally triggers early repayment charges, and those charges vary by provider and months remaining. Before you place an order, we recommend checking likely moving plans so contract length matches your expected stay.
Not always. Many full fibre and cable packages are sold as broadband-only services with no traditional phone line requirement. Some FTTC products still run over a line setup, so the answer depends on the network available at your exact DE55 address.
Some Alfreton addresses can get FTTP, while others cannot yet, so it is not town-wide by default. Coverage can differ by street, building type, and network rollout stage. We check this directly against your address and then show the highest confirmed tier you can actually order.
No, Virgin Media uses its own cable network and availability is patch-specific. One road may show cable packages while a nearby one may only have Openreach-based options. A postcode search alone is helpful, but an address-level check gives the accurate answer.
The safer option is to book for the day after completion. Completion-day key release can run late, and missed engineer access can cause a rebooking delay. A short buffer usually gives a smoother start in your new home.
In most cases yes, if your tenancy agreement allows service changes and you have permission for any required installation work. Openreach line activations can be quick where a working line exists, while new cable or fibre installs may need landlord consent for drilling. We can outline likely lead times before you commit.
From £299
Compare local removals support for your move date and property size.
From £899
Fixed-fee conveyancing quotes for buyers moving within or to DE55.
From £0
Mortgage advice and lender comparison for your Alfreton purchase budget.
From £420
Book a RICS Level 2 survey with clear reporting before exchange.
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In DE55 many homes still run FTTC from the street cabinet while others reach full fibre, so start with your address, not the advert. Postcode-checked deals for move-in.
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.