BT: Telecoms giantโ€™s profits dip after losing more than 200,000 broadband customers


Telecoms giant BT has reported a significant slowdown in customer losses, signalling a potential stabilisation within the fiercely competitive broadband market.

The group revealed it shed 210,000 broadband customers during the final three months of 2025.

This figure proved less severe than market expectations, which had predicted losses exceeding 230,000.

Consequently, BT has adjusted its full-year projection for Openreach fixed-line broadband customer losses downwards, now forecasting 850,000, an improvement from its earlier estimate of 900,000.

Simultaneously, the company experienced a notable surge in demand for full-fibre coverage, successfully adding 571,000 new customers in the quarter.

Openreach has contended with customer attrition in recent years, largely due to the rise of low-priced competitors, often termed “retail altnets,” including providers like CityFibre.

However, chief executive Allison Kirkby informed the Press Association that this competitive pressure is now “abating” as BT continues to expand its full-fibre infrastructure across the country.

The group stressed it was on track to meet its financial guidance for the current year

The group stressed it was on track to meet its financial guidance for the current year (BT/PA)

She said: โ€œWeโ€™re building further and faster across the country than anybody else, because weโ€™re getting into the areas where we didnโ€™t previously have fibre.

โ€œNow we have two-thirds of the country on fibre and weโ€™re seeing reduced competition, so the consumer demand is there.โ€

The telecoms giant reported that revenues fell by 4 per cent to ยฃ5 billion in the quarter to December 31 due to service revenue declines.

It was also impacted by lower equipment revenues, largely linked to weakness in handsets, and divestments.

Adjusted UK service revenues fell by 2 per cent to ยฃ3.8 billion for the quarter.

Meanwhile, pre-tax profits fell to ยฃ183 million for the quarter, compared with ยฃ427 million a year earlier, after being hit by ยฃ214 million of losses related to its sports joint venture behind TNT Sports.

It runs the joint venture alongside US media giant Warner Bros Discovery, which has been at the centre of a bidding war between rivals Netflix and Paramount Skydance.

BT said it was now projecting the loss of 850,000 Openreach fixed-line broadband customers for the full year, down from a previous 900,000 estimate

BT said it was now projecting the loss of 850,000 Openreach fixed-line broadband customers for the full year, down from a previous 900,000 estimate (PA Wire)

BT stressed it was still on track to meet its financial guidance for the current year.

Ms Kirkby said: โ€œBT continues to deliver on its strategy โ€“ building and connecting the UK to the best next-generation networks at record pace, while accelerating our transformation.

โ€œOur network leadership strengthened further in the quarter, with full-fibre broadband now reaching more than 21 million homes and businesses, and our 5G+ network accessible to 69 per cent of the population.

โ€œOpenreach achieved record full-fibre connections and our consumer division again added customers in broadband, mobile and TV.โ€

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