Ofcom has called on EE, Plusnet, Shell, Sky, TalkTalk and Vodafone to offer cheap broadband deals for low-income households and join firms that already do this, including BT, Hyperoptic and Virgin Media O2.
It’s part of a push by the regulator to get more customers signed up to ‘social tariffs’, which are aimed at families on Universal Credit. These packages are priced between £10-£20 a month, for speeds ranging from 10Mbps to 67Mbps.
Ofcom claims that 4.2 million households are eligible for these especially cheap deals, but only 55,000 (1.3 per cent) have actually signed up for them.
Switching to a social tariff could halve an average annual broadband bill to £144, it says, but 84 per cent of people receiving benefits are unaware they exist.
Ofcom says it has…