it is only the phone PSTN that will cease and you will still be able to get adsl broadband until the eventual conversion to fibre
There is a lot of misleading information on the Internet.
Copper is going to be around for a very long time, probably forever.
As far as ADSL is concerned, unless you renew your contract, or your exchange becomes a fibre only one, then ADSL is always going to be an option where there are copper MSANS installed in the exchange building. That covers most of the main exchange buildings. Some small rural exchanges will eventually close, once fibre is available to all of its customers.
In fact, with the closure of the PSTN network, the MSANs are going to have to supply a basic 500kb broadband service to provide a phone service for customers that only want a phone service, and not broadband. MSAN (Multi Service Access Node) can be configured for a wide range of services.
There is never going to be sufficient capacity in the FTTC fibre cabinets to supply all of the phone customers.
There are a number of different letters that have gone out to homeowners in this area (Teesside) related to impending POTS (Plain Old Telephone System) changes.
In laws, nice large house on a main road but are currently only able to get ADSL2 have been informed if they do nothing their connection will be switched to VDSL2 (which they currently couldn't get if they wanted) with Digital Voice and they'll get a new router and phone. ADSL depends on infrastructure at the phone exchange, VDSL potentially doesn't even though it uses the existing copper phone lines to the property. *As they have the boxes for OR, CF, & VM in a row just off their property they'll probably be offered FTTP very very shortly.
The letter we received last year (5yo house) was to the effect that we would at some point in the future move to either FTTP or Mobile provided broadband as the phone line provided service was to be decommissioned).
The changes are happening, but it's still not one size fits all!
The PSTN switch off by the end of December 2025 ‘may’ require some consumers to be migrated to SoTAP , (single order transitional product ) , in areas where FTTC isn’t available ( E/O lines , or cabinets with so few customer that would make FTTC uneconomic ) then SoGEA wont be available but DV landline or broadband service needs to be provided.
In majority of cases after PSTN switch off , those still on copper , will be SoGEA , only using the copper pair ( the D side ) from the cabinet to the property, the E side to the exchange redundant, those on SoTAP will be using the exchange based ADSL/ADSL2 equipment, so the E side copper cable to the cabinet as well as the D side from the cabinet to the property will be used , but as with SoGEA , the telephony will be DV .
As stated , there is quite a lot of incorrect information on line , some of it , presumably designed deliberately to get customers to switch before December 2025 , basically ‘frightening’ them to switch using nonsense about after 2025 your phone line won’t work , unfortunately there are some that even with constant reassurance, chose to believe the B.S
Thanks for all your expertise using technical language with which I'm not fully familiar though better informed than I was a few weeks ago thanks to you folks here. The information is gratefully received and I appreciate that. On the positive side and being nearly 86 I might not be around for some of these events, who knows?
Anyway keeping ADSL running for a while yet would certainly make my life easier with placement of my existing telephones and the BT Hub 2 when it eventually comes through my letterbox.
ADSL/ADSL2 or VDSL ( FTTC ) is almost a distinction without a difference when it comes to the PSTN switch off , BT Digital Voice is Internet Protocol ( IP ) and only needs a small amount of bandwidth to operate, so even a relatively small bandwidth product like ADSL can easily handle DV , BT ADSL will continue in locations where there are BT customers with no FTTC or FTTP alternatives.
When December 2025 comes around there is no reason for any BT customer to fear being ‘disconnected’ there are legitimate worry’s some may have about a phone service being dependent on ‘broadband’, but this is really a worry about failure of mains power in the home , and that can be addressed for those fearing this and who genuinely have no mobile coverage, by using a battery back up ( BBS ) (UPS ) uninterruptible power supply , and if that will not supplied free by BT because the customer doesn’t qualify for ‘free’ , they can always purchase one themselves.
So what would have happened had you been in my position and was sticking with ADSL (hopefully) for the time being, just ignore pressure sales guff from BT and set up my phone/s and plug into the green socket on the SH2 (or via a DV adapter) when the day comes?