Chester homes group into FTTC, full fibre and cable, so we check which reaches your address and compare deals from major providers for move-in.








Chester broadband availability can change from one street to the next, especially around the city walls, the Rows, Hoole, Handbridge and Boughton. We compare deals across major UK providers, then check what is actually available at your new postcode before you choose. That matters in Chester because Openreach-based FTTC, newer FTTP and Virgin Media cable do not always cover the same addresses. A flat near Chester Cathedral may have different choices from a semi-detached house off Liverpool Road or a terrace near the River Dee.
Our broadband partners can help you line up service for the day after completion, so you are not waiting in a CH1 or CH2 property with no connection. We look at price first, then speed, then contract terms. BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Plusnet, Vodafone, EE, NOW Broadband and Virgin Media are common names to check, with Openreach hosting most fixed lines. In some Chester streets, full fibre may be available; in others, the practical option is still FTTC over copper from the cabinet.

Openreach
Main fixed-line network
Virgin (postcode)
Cable network
30-80 Mbps where cabinet copper is still used
Typical FTTC range
100 Mbps to 1Gbps+ where FTTP is live
Typical full fibre range
CH1-CH4
Local check needed
Day after completion
Best move-in timing
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Chester homes can usually be grouped into three broadband types: FTTC, FTTP and cable. FTTC uses fibre to the street cabinet, then copper for the final section into the property. In practical terms, that often means 30-80 Mbps, with the lower end more likely where the cabinet is far from the house. Older streets near the Rows, Northgate Street and Watergate Street can be harder to predict without a postcode check.
FTTP is the faster Openreach-based option, with fibre running all the way to the home. Packages usually start around 100 Mbps and can rise to 1Gbps+ where the local network has been upgraded. This is the connection type most movers ask us about in Chester, especially people working from home near the University of Chester, Upton or Great Boughton. Availability still depends on the exact address, not just the town name.
Virgin Media cable runs on a separate network from Openreach. It can deliver 100 Mbps to 1Gbps+ packages in parts of Chester, but it needs its own cable route and installation where the property is not already connected. A house in Blacon may show different results from a flat near Foregate Street or a property by Handbridge. We check both networks, then show the deals that match the address you give us.
Some homes still rely on copper-heavy lines, particularly where full fibre has not reached the street or where older building layouts complicate installation. Chester has a high number of historic buildings around the city centre, including listed properties close to Chester Cathedral and the city walls. If external drilling, internal routing or landlord permission is needed, installation can take longer. That is why booking early matters.
Illustrative monthly pricing only. Live broadband prices change weekly and must be checked by postcode.
A 35 Mbps connection is usually enough for 1-2 people streaming, browsing and using video calls in a smaller CH1 flat. It may feel tight if two people are watching 4K video while someone else downloads a game update. Chester terraces near Hoole Road or Boughton can also have older internal wiring, which may affect Wi-Fi performance even when the line itself is sound. The package speed and the router position both matter.
Around 100 Mbps suits many households of 3-4, especially where 4K streaming, gaming and hybrid work happen at the same time. For larger houses in Upton, Great Boughton or Handbridge, 500 Mbps+ gives more headroom for file transfers and multiple consoles. A 1Gbps package is useful if several people work with cloud storage or download large files daily. Paying for it only makes sense if the address can receive it and the household will use the capacity.
Price still comes first for most movers. A cheaper 100 Mbps full fibre plan can be a better buy than a premium 500 Mbps deal that sits unused. We compare headline speed, monthly cost, upfront fees and contract length before you commit. In Chester, that postcode check is the only way to separate a good deal from a package that is not available at the new address.

Give us the Chester address, including the postcode and flat number if there is one. We check Openreach-based services, Virgin Media cable where available and any full fibre options showing for that exact property.
Pick a speed that matches the household, not just the largest number on the page. A 100 Mbps plan can suit many homes near Hoole, Saltney or Boughton, while 500 Mbps+ is better for heavy work-from-home use.
Book the appointment for after completion. Chester city-centre flats, listed buildings and rented properties may need landlord or management company approval before engineers can route new fibre or cable.
Some Openreach-based switches can activate on an existing line without an engineer visit. This is common when moving from one Openreach provider to another, such as BT to Sky or TalkTalk to Plusnet.
Arrange delivery to your current address or a safe delivery point. A missed router delivery in CH1 or CH2 can delay activation even when the network order is ready.
Once the router is live, test speeds near the router and in the rooms you use most. Thick walls in older Chester properties can weaken Wi-Fi, so a mesh system may be more useful than paying for a faster package.
Completion day in Chester can run late, especially when keys are released through an estate agent after funds arrive. Do not book an engineer for the same day as legal handover. Book for the day after, then use a mobile hotspot if you need a short backup.
Chester is not one single broadband footprint. The city centre around Eastgate Street, Bridge Street and the Rows has older buildings, shared entrances and listed fabric that can make installation less direct. Newer streets outside the walls may have simpler duct routes or an existing Openreach line ready to activate. A postcode check will show the difference before you order.
Homes near the River Dee, Handbridge and Queens Park can include older terraces, converted buildings and flats with shared service routes. In those cases, the line of entry matters. Fibre may be available in the street but still need a practical route into the home. If you are renting, ask the landlord before approving drilling or external cabling.
In Hoole, Upton and Blacon, many properties are more likely to have standard Openreach lines already in place. That can make switching quicker when the previous occupant used a provider on the same network. A move from Virgin Media cable to an Openreach provider is different. It may need a new service activation and an engineer appointment.
Chester also has student and staff demand linked to the University of Chester, plus family homes towards Great Boughton and Boughton Heath. Usage patterns vary. A single occupant near Northgate Arena may need a lower-cost 30-80 Mbps FTTC plan, while a household with 4K streaming and cloud backups may need 100 Mbps or more. We compare the available packages rather than assuming one speed fits every CH postcode.
Full fibre rollout is still uneven across the UK, and Chester is no exception. Some addresses will see FTTP options from Openreach-based providers, while others will only show FTTC or cable. Ex-directory cabinets, long copper runs and building access restrictions can all affect the result. The best answer comes from checking the exact door number.
Openreach-to-Openreach switches are usually the simplest. Moving from Plusnet to BT, Sky to TalkTalk or Vodafone to EE may not need a new cable, because the service uses the same underlying Openreach network. Many of these orders can activate quickly once the previous service has ended. We still check the Chester address because flats, business conversions and recently split properties can show odd records.
Cable-to-Openreach moves need more planning. If the current occupant used Virgin Media and you choose an Openreach provider, the property may need a usable phone line or fibre entry point. The reverse is also true when switching from an Openreach provider to Virgin Media cable. For a Chester move, book around 2 weeks ahead where a fresh installation may be needed.
Router delivery is often the weak point. Providers may send equipment before activation, and couriers need a reliable address. If you are moving from outside Cheshire West and Chester, send the router to your current home unless you already control the new letterbox. That avoids chasing parcels around CH1 after completion.

Chester broadband prices change often, so we treat every figure as a live quote rather than a fixed local tariff. Many mainstream packages sit on 18 or 24 month contracts. Early repayment charges can apply if you leave before the end of the term. That point matters if you are renting a flat near Foregate Street for 12 months but looking at a 24 month broadband deal.
Upfront costs can change the real price. Some providers charge for activation, delivery or installation, while others discount the first few months. A £28/month package may not be cheaper than a £30/month deal once upfront costs are included. We check the monthly cost and the first-year cost where the provider makes it available.
Social tariffs are worth checking if your household receives Universal Credit, ESA, JSA or Pension Credit. Major providers usually price these at around £15-£20/month, with shorter terms and no heavy exit fees. Availability still depends on the provider and the address. A Chester household in CH2 may have different network options from one in CH4.
Phone lines are no longer always required in the way they used to be. FTTP can provide broadband without a traditional copper phone service, while FTTC often still uses the copper pair into the home. If you need a landline number for medical equipment, alarms or an older payment terminal, tell us before ordering. Some digital voice services may not work during a power cut.
Use the full address, not just Chester or the first part of the postcode. We check the property against Openreach-based providers, Virgin Media cable where present and any full fibre options showing for that address. A flat near Chester Cathedral can return a different result from a house in Upton or Saltney.
Often, yes, but only if your provider serves the new address. If your current provider cannot supply the same service in CH1, CH2, CH3 or CH4, they may offer a different package or discuss cancellation terms. Check early because early repayment charges may apply on 18 or 24 month contracts.
For 1-2 people, 35 Mbps can be enough for browsing, streaming and video calls. A household of 3-4 should usually look at 100 Mbps if 4K streaming, gaming or home working happens at the same time. Heavy users in larger homes around Great Boughton or Handbridge may prefer 500 Mbps+ if available.
Some Chester addresses can get FTTP, but rollout is not even across the city. Streets near Hoole, Blacon, Boughton and the city centre can show different results, even inside the same postcode district. We run a postcode check to confirm whether FTTP is live at the exact property.
Virgin Media cable is available in parts of Chester, but it does not use the Openreach network. That means availability can differ from BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Plusnet, Vodafone and EE. If the property has not had cable before, installation may need an engineer visit.
No. Book it for the day after completion. Legal handover can be delayed, keys may not be released until late afternoon and engineers usually need access during a set appointment window.
Not always. FTTP can provide broadband without a traditional copper phone line, while FTTC usually uses the existing copper pair from the cabinet to the home. If you need a landline number, medical alarm or monitored security system, check compatibility before ordering.
Social tariffs are offered by many major providers for eligible households receiving Universal Credit, ESA, JSA or Pension Credit. They are usually around £15-£20/month and may have more flexible terms. The provider still needs to serve your Chester address, so a postcode check comes first.
You may still be able to choose between several Openreach-based providers, but the physical line speed may be limited by copper length and cabinet location. We can also check Virgin Media cable or mobile broadband as alternatives. In older streets close to the city walls, internal wiring and thick walls can affect the result too.
For a simple Openreach-based switch, ordering 1-2 weeks before moving may be enough. For a new Virgin Media cable install, FTTP install or flat with access rules, allow around 2 weeks or more. Chester city-centre conversions can need extra checks for wayleaves, landlord permission or engineer access.
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Chester homes group into FTTC, full fibre and cable, so we check which reaches your address and compare deals from major providers 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.