Post by BrightsideS9Post by Mark CarverPost by Andy BurnsPost by Mark CarverI was expecting PlusNet to remove PSTN at contract renewal, but it
seems not !?
That's what their website says to me, I can stick with existing contract
which will get v.expensive from august and keep phone, or I can take a
new contract without phone for slightly more.
Also looked at EE, they seem to be not offering phone with their
broadband either ...
"You won't be able to get your home phone number back.
You'll have to get a brand new number if you decide you
need a home phone in the future."
That seems to go against the option somebody (Theo?) mentioned here to
take your number to a different provider for up to 30 days?
Last time I dabbled with EE's website it gave a choice of keeping your
existing number, or having a new one issued ?
I thought if you are moving supplier within the 'EE-BT-PN' family, your
number comes with you, without a struggle ?
There's other weirdness. If you move to Sky, from a 'BT' family
supplier, you generally keep your number. If you move house with Sky,
you lose your number, Our son moved 400 yds up the road, and his Sky DV
number changed. (FTTP at old and new house).
I need to find an easy way to migrate my mother away from Plusnet in
April 2025 to an ISP that will retain her number for their DV product.
Anything more than being without her existing (56 year old) number for
more than overnight is not acceptable.
I was thinking of either EE/BT or Zen (Zen is a better deal overall,
because their 'unlimited phone call allowance is cheaper than EE/BT
despite the broadband being more)
I have BT broadband and 700 free minutes on landline to UK numbers and
mobiles
I have just checked my "offers" on BT's web site.e
1. Broadband only - no home phone
2, Broadband and pay as you go home phone - £3 extra / month.
3. Broadband and unlimited calls on home phone - £11 extra / month.
To be comparable with my current BT contract I would have option 3
above and pay £5.81 above my current price.
Option 2 looks the safer to keep landline number for incoming calls,
but then using mobile(s) for outgoing calls has to be factored in to
the cost.
Having saved £8 by taking option 2 over option 3 leaves £8 to pay
for mobile(s) outgoing calls. This OK for current smart phone users
but may not be so for elderly users, who like me and my missus (both
in our eighties) prefer not to use mobiles for calls.
Hence a current BT broadband user can keep their landline and pay
extra for the same product.
There is a further possibility:
Broadband only plus VoIP service.
You can port your existing landline number to the VoIP service. Small
porting charge (typically £20), plus £3 per month, plus calls (typically
1p/minute to landlines). You would need to buy a VoIP telephone (from
about £45).
Note that porting your existing landline number will cancel any
associated broadband service.
Converting your existing contract to broadband-only with the same
supplier will cancel your landline number, but OFCOM now says it is
possible for you to port that cancelled number so long as you do so
within a couple of weeks. So better to plan this in advance and set up
an account with your chosen VoIP service provider and warn them to start
the number import as soon as your old service is cancelled.
Note that VoIP needs a reliable broadband service to carry it. FTTP is
ideal. FTTC is probably OK. ADSL (if that's all you can get) - which
probably means you are in a very rural location - will not be
sufficiently reliable; but one hopes that it will be replaced with FTTP
sometime soon. Of course there are people who will never get
landline-based broadband, let alone FTTP.
--
Graham J