Trends-UK

Map shows the 94 UK areas where BT are switching off landlines – check your location now

The UK is undertaking a far-reaching project to dismantle the country’s century-old network of copper phone lines and replace them with next-generation full-fibre services by January 2027. In its latest move, BT-owned Openreach has named 94 locations set for the next major switch-off.

These exchanges will impact around just under 960,000 premises across the UK over the next 12 months, it has been reported. The plan is part of Openreach’s “stop sell” order, which will see the 94 areas move away from the copper-based landlines or broadband services that the country has relied on since 1876, towards upgraded next-generation full-fibre services.

Once upgraded, users will be required to switch to a broadband-powered phone, utilising Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology to connect calls – a technology already employed by apps such as WhatsApp, Skype, or Messenger.

Now, the Express has created a map to show the locations of all 94 places set for the switch off within the next year, stretching from parts of Northern Ireland to Kent and Suffolk.

According to Openreach, once three-quarters of UK premises have been upgraded, the copper-based technology will be permanently switched off.

The full-fibre upgrade will give users several new features, including the ability to call multiple people at the same time, better call quality, the ability to block numbers and incoming spam prevention. However, unlike traditional landlines, which continue to work during power cuts as they draw power from the exchange, VoIP systems will not work without a backup power bank. 

According to current plans, the vast majority of the UK will have switched to this technology by the end of January 2027 – a date 13 months later than originally projected last year.

Several major areas, including Blackpool, Portsmouth, Chester and Birmingham, are among the locations set to make the change in the next 12 months, as well as smaller communities in all four nations of the UK, including Carluke in Scotland, Botwnnog in Wales, Newtownstewart in Tyrone, Northern Ireland and Coggeshall in England.

Openreach Managed Customer Migrations Director, James Lilley, said: “The stop sell programme is a critical part of ensuring that the UK’s communication infrastructure is ready to meet the demands of the future.

“Taking advantage of the progress of our Full Fibre build and encouraging people to upgrade where a majority can access our new network is the right thing to do as it makes no sense, both operationally and commercially, to keep the old copper network and our new fibre network running side-by-side.

“As copper’s ability to support modern communications declines, the immediate focus is getting people onto newer, future-proofed technologies.”

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