Speed depends on the exact address, with many KT13 homes still on FTTC around 30-80 Mbps and full fibre reaching more, so we check yours and compare deals for move-in.








KT13 movers usually want two things from broadband, a fair monthly price and enough speed from day one. We compare deals across major UK providers and match results to your exact postcode in Weybridge, including roads around Bridge Road, Church Street, Brooklands Road, and Oatlands Drive. Our team checks line availability before you commit, so you can see which packages are actually installable at your new address. You can then book the switch or install to land just after completion, which helps avoid move-day delays.
Weybridge has a mixed housing footprint, and that matters for broadband line type. Properties near St James’ Church in the Town Centre Conservation Area can have older Openreach routes, while parts of Brooklands and newer addresses near developments like Brooklands Grove can have different fibre options. We also see variation between addresses near Monument Green and homes closer to the River Wey flood warning area at Wey Meadows and Hamm Court, where street-level network history can differ even within KT13. Our quote flow is built for that postcode-by-postcode variation.

Openreach copper/fibre
Main fixed-line network in KT13
Selected addresses
Virgin Media cable footprint
30-80 Mbps
Typical FTTC sync range
100 Mbps to 1 Gbps+
Typical FTTP product range
100 Mbps to 1 Gbps+
Typical cable product range
14 days
Move planning lead time
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Speed availability in Weybridge depends on the exact address, not just the town name. In practice, many KT13 homes still sit on FTTC where real-world packages land in the 30-80 Mbps range, which is enough for standard streaming and general home use. Full fibre is also present in parts of the area, with packages from 100 Mbps up to 1 Gbps+ where FTTP is live. We check this at postcode level so a flat off High Street and a house near St George’s Hill are not treated as the same.
Virgin Media’s cable network is separate from Openreach, and that split is important in Weybridge. One road near Brooklands Road can have cable options at 100 Mbps, 250 Mbps, 500 Mbps, or 1 Gbps+, while a nearby road may only have Openreach-based choices. That is why we do not show generic “townwide” assumptions. We show what is actually available at your doorway, then sort by monthly cost and contract length.
New-build clusters can change the local speed picture quickly. Brooklands Grove by Cala Homes, Cricket Way by Glenwood Homes, and Staplands Manor in Oatlands are all useful examples where network readiness may differ by phase. A single development can have some plots prepped for fibre from handover and others waiting on final network sign-off. The same pattern appears around East Road KT13 0LD, Lincoln Court KT13 0PH, and Oak Mount Place KT13 0PS, where package choice can vary by building entry point.
We also factor in building age because Weybridge housing is mixed. Local data shows a median construction year of 1976, with 25% of homes built before the 1940s and 8.5% built between 2010 and 2019. Older stock around Church Street or Heath Road can be more likely to rely on legacy copper cabinet paths, while some later developments around Brooklands can have cleaner fibre routes. No guesswork, just an address check.
Illustrative monthly pricing bands for new customer deals in May 2026, final prices depend on postcode, contract term, and setup.
Start with how many people and devices will be online in the same evening. In a two-person flat near Monument Green, 35 Mbps can be enough for HD streaming, video calls, and routine browsing if usage is moderate. In a larger home around Oatlands Drive with smart TVs and frequent downloads, stepping up to 100 Mbps can reduce congestion at peak times. For heavy home working and large cloud transfers, the jump is usually worth it.
Gaming and remote work change the equation more than headline speed ads suggest. A household with two gamers and multiple 4K streams in Brooklands often benefits from 500 Mbps or above, mainly for capacity and stability when everything happens at once. Latency also matters, especially on FTTP and cable products where response time is usually lower than older FTTC routes. We help you match package cost to the usage pattern, not just a marketing label.
Contract length should be part of the speed decision. Most deals are 18 or 24 months, and early exit charges can be steep if you move again quickly. With 310 residential property sales recorded in KT13 over the last 12 months, according to homedata.co.uk, move timing is a real issue for local households. If you may relocate again, a slightly lower speed on a better term can be smarter than locking into the biggest package.

Enter your exact new address in KT13, not just Weybridge town name. Availability can differ between roads like Bridge Road, Gower Road, and Members Hill.
Compare FTTC, FTTP, and cable options side by side. Focus on monthly cost, upfront charges, contract term, and realistic speed tier for your household.
Choose an activation or engineer date for the day after legal completion. This avoids failed visits if keys are delayed.
If your line is already active on an Openreach path, some switches between Openreach-based providers can be done fast, often next day.
Ask for router dispatch before move-in and confirm your first bill date. This keeps your setup clean from week one.
Book your broadband go-live for the day after completion, not completion day. In Weybridge chains, key release can run late, and engineer appointments can be missed if legal handover slips. One day of buffer usually prevents a failed install fee and a rebook delay.
Street-level context matters in KT13 because housing age, conservation status, and network path history vary a lot across a small area. Weybridge Town Centre Conservation Area, first designated in 1977 and extended in 2006, includes Church Street, Bridge Road, and Heath Road where older property footprints can mean older duct routes. Monument Green Conservation Area was designated in 1990 and has its own building mix around the High Street. In both locations, two adjacent properties can return different broadband results.
The Wey Navigation Conservation Area, designated in 2002, runs from the Thames junction towards the old Wey bridge and includes bankside sections such as Bull Dogs island. That riverside geometry is not just planning context, it can influence historic utility routing and cabinet placement. Low-lying land near the River Wey and Thames confluence sits around 10-20 m above sea level in places, which is relevant when planning external works and access windows for installs. Short version, always check the specific address.
Brooklands adds another layer. The Brooklands Conservation Area covers the old race track site, and nearby schemes such as Brooklands Grove and the JTI Building retirement village consent at Members Hill show how new occupancy can reshape demand patterns. A consent for 176 flats was granted in April 2024 at JTI Building, Brooklands Road, and a separate proposal involved 21 flats at 6 The Heights in October 2024. More units can mean more pressure on appointment slots during peak moving months.
Oatlands and St George’s Hill also show why no single “best provider” exists for all of Weybridge. Staplands Manor in Oatlands and addresses around East Road KT13 0LD, Lincoln Court KT13 0PH, and Oak Mount Place KT13 0PS are useful examples of postcode-level variation between building phases. Sigma Homes also submitted plans for a £20m scheme of 29 dwellings near the River Wey, adding another future pocket of demand. We track these local shifts so your quote reflects current network reality.
Housing turnover supports the need for flexible setup planning. homedata.co.uk records 310 residential sales in KT13 over the last 12 months, with 101 sales in the £280,000-£494,000 band. On the listings side, home.co.uk reports an average asking price of £1,552,158 and a current average listing price of £1,544,285, with a -17.8% six-month change. Different price points usually map to different property types, and that often means different broadband line histories too.
One more local point. Weybridge sits on Bagshot Sands in the south and river gravels towards the Thames, with Bracklesham Clay around St George’s Hill and alluvial silty clay in the Wey valley floor. Those geology notes are not broadband data, but they do explain why street works and civils can vary by location, especially near waterlogged ground. It is another reason we advise early booking if your move is close to Brooklands Road, Hamm Court, or Wey Meadows.
Openreach-to-Openreach switches are often the quickest route for movers. If your new Weybridge address already has an active compatible line, the change can be completed fast, sometimes next day, with no major cabling work. This is common when moving between mainstream providers that use the same wholesale network. We flag these options clearly during quote comparison.
Network-to-network moves need longer lead time. A transfer from Virgin Media cable to an Openreach full fibre line, or the other way round, usually needs a fresh installation appointment and sometimes external work. In KT13 we suggest booking around 14 days ahead, especially in busy move periods and around newer developments where slot demand can spike. That extra planning window usually prevents a no-internet week.
Keep your old service live until your new one is confirmed where possible. This is useful for chain moves around Weybridge town centre and Brooklands where completion dates can shift at short notice. If your legal handover changes, we can help you re-time activation and avoid accidental overlap charges. Small admin steps, big difference.

Use our address checker with the full postcode and property line, for example a specific home on Church Street or Brooklands Road, not just “Weybridge”. We then compare packages that are installable at that address across major providers. This matters in KT13 because coverage can change between nearby roads and even between flats in the same block.
Usually yes, but it depends on your provider and whether the same network type exists at your new address. If your old home had cable and your new one only has Openreach FTTC or FTTP, it may count as a new install. Check contract terms first because early exit charges can apply when a provider cannot supply the new property on equivalent terms.
A light-use home can often run well on around 35 Mbps. For a family with multiple streams and gaming, 100 Mbps is often a better baseline. Homes with heavy remote work, frequent large uploads, or several gamers at once should look at 500 Mbps or above if available at the postcode.
Yes, most major providers offer social tariffs for eligible households, often around £15-£20 per month. Eligibility commonly includes benefits such as Universal Credit, ESA, JSA, or Pension Credit. We can show eligible tariffs during comparison so you can see lower-cost options quickly.
Most broadband deals run for 18 or 24 months. Leaving before term end usually triggers early repayment charges based on remaining months and provider policy. If you are likely to move again soon, pick a contract length that fits your expected timeline rather than only choosing the highest speed.
Not always. Many full fibre and cable packages are data-only, and digital voice can be added without a traditional copper phone service. Some FTTC products still depend on line setup conventions, so we check that at order stage and explain any install steps clearly.
Some KT13 addresses can get FTTP now, while others remain on FTTC or cable options. Availability is specific to your exact property and can differ between areas such as Oatlands, Brooklands, and St George’s Hill. We run an address-level check and show the fastest installable package for your line.
Start comparing early, then place the order once your completion date is stable. The safest activation date is usually the day after completion, since same-day key release can slip in a property chain. That one-day buffer helps avoid missed engineer calls and rebooking delays.
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Compare trusted Weybridge removals firms and book your move slot.
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Fixed-fee conveyancing quotes for Weybridge home purchases.
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Speak with mortgage advisers and compare lending options for your purchase.
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Arrange a RICS Level 2 survey before exchange in KT13.
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Speed depends on the exact address, with many KT13 homes still on FTTC around 30-80 Mbps and full fibre reaching more, so we check yours and compare 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.