What broadband speed do I actually need?

Speed you pay for and speed you need aren't the same thing. Here's a realistic guide to how much download speed different activities and households really require.

Broadband speed is measured in megabits per second (Mbps). More isn't always better value — what matters is having enough for everything happening at once. As a rough UK guide, "superfast" broadband is 30 Mbps or more, and "ultrafast" full-fibre packages run from 100 Mbps into the hundreds.

Speed by activity (per device)

Now multiply by your household

The trick is that these add up when several things happen at once. One person 4K streaming while another is on a video call and a games console downloads an update can easily need 50–60 Mbps combined. As a rule of thumb:

Speed isn't the whole story

Two other numbers matter. Upload speed affects video calls, sending large files and backups — full-fibre lines have much better upload than older cable or copper connections. And ping (latency) — the delay before data starts moving — is what makes gaming and calls feel responsive; under 20 ms is excellent.

Check what you're actually getting

Before upgrading (or complaining to your provider), find out your real download, upload and ping. Our speed test runs right in your browser — no app needed.

→ Run the free Broadband Speed Test

Related reading

Why is my broadband slow? · Mbps vs MB/s explained

General guidance only. Actual requirements vary by service and device. The figures above are typical minimums for a smooth experience.