Plenty of news out there this morning on the January inflation number that forms part of the BT (and others), price increase calculation.
If BT apply it all, then customers will be looking at 10.5% (the confirmed CPI number) + 3.9% = 14.4% across relevant products.
No comment on the mechanism from me, we all knew the calculation when we took out the contract, but it will be interesting to see what numbers they actually go with for everyone. Also interested to see what happens (if anything), to new customer prices or re-contracts.
I only have Fibre 2 broadband with PAYG digital voice at £28.99 a month, if they apply the full amount it will be a £4.17 per month increase for me.
I'd be amazed if it's anything less than the full amount.
Ofcom really need to look at the +3.9%, which I believe is unjustifiable in the current climate. They also need to look at exactly how a raft of ISPs supposedly in competition with each other have all coincidentally settled on exactly the same formula. 🤔
@rbz5416wrote:I'd be amazed if it's anything less than the full amount.
Agreed, although I can see a case for them reducing it a bit with a view to spinning it as a positive for customers. "We are not increasing our prices as much as we could during difficult times", something like that.
@rbz5416wrote:Ofcom really need to look at the +3.9%, which I believe is unjustifiable in the current climate. They also need to look at exactly how a raft of ISPs supposedly in competition with each other have all coincidentally settled on exactly the same formula. 🤔
Funny that isn't it?
Totally agree. Increasing prices by inflation is one thing but adding 3.9% on top cannot be justified