I am getting regular reminders ' not to forget/miss out' on renewing my contract which ends in a few weeks. I have BT Broadband and an EETV package. I assume these reminders are just marketing and that nothing will happen when my contract expires. The suggestion in these emails is that I will lose the TV I have on the end of contract date.
You might lose any agreed discounts as you should simply move onto standard pricing at the end of your current deal.
Some prefer to re-contract if they can get a better deal and intended to stay anyway.
The only other potential complications I can think of are if the package you are on is deemed “legacy” and they want to get you off it or if they want to try and fully push you to EE if you do re-contract.
Thank you.
So, what is likely to happen if I decided to renew post contract expiry? Will BT be trying to sell me a new 24 month deal for Broadband , calls and EE TV or will they try to separate me into paying a separate TV contract with EE like they did with the mobile phone contracts last time?
Also, I keep seeing links showing a new EE box. Are these automatically being rolled out when a BTTV customer renews with an EETV package?
@homerhotspur We renewed a couple of months ago now. We stayed with BT for broadband as EE can’t offer us anything better on our line than the 51 Mbps that we get with BT. We were offered good renewal deals for broadband & tv and are now paying less for both than we were before on a new 24 month contract. We kept our landline and had to switch over to Digital Voice, but have had no issues with that at all. We have kept our BT Pro tv box that we had at the beginning of the last contract and it works really well for our requirements. We have been out of contract with BT Mobile for over a year now and will probably stay like that until we are told otherwise.
You may need to be assertive and stand your ground when you phone up if you are unfortunate enough to speak to someone who is pushy in wanting to move you over to EE. However, it may rather depend if EE are able to offer you more than was the case with us. We weren’t interested in the Apple TV being offered on EE. If you want to stay with BT, you can, even if the person that you speak to is keen to move you over.
All useful replies and information thank you. Its amazing how out of touch with things you get every 2 years. I need to read up about 'Digital Voice' as I don't really know what that's all about . I hadn't realised that BT and EE were both offering competing broadband and tv packages either. I just thought that BT were offloading mobile phones to EE , followed by TV, whilst keeping broadband as its core product. It does rather complicate matters, compared to previously.
I don't have a Pro box. Will this be known to BT or will I need to flag it up ?
Let’s have a go:-
BT sell their own broadband with their own BT router and their own BT extender discs.
EE sell their own broadband with their own EE router and their own EE extender discs.
Both entities supply EE TV, the same streaming service, where you can elect to have a Pro box (YouView recorder) and up to two non-recording Mini boxes (also YouView).
With EE only, you can elect to have a non-recording EE Apple TV box instead of the PRO box, and the Mini boxes are free, whereas on BT you pay for them.
I’m vague about phone services, though I expect BT Mobile will continue to exist, even if only for business customers in the future. EE mobile is firmly established as a consumer brand, though it does currently have a business arm.
My DV adaptor is labelled BT, though this may be historical. My DV phone, supplied by BT, has no external branding at all; not BT, not EE. As far as I know, DV is BT proprietary, but maybe it, or an equivalent, is in EE routers too?
But certainly, unless there are other subtle differences I’ve missed, it seems best to consider EE TV as a single streaming service, but one which can be served up via alternative hardware.
Some corrections @Midnight_Voice :
Regardless of BT or EE broadband, you'll receive an EE branded TV Box.
On BT Broadband, you can only have a maximum of 1 extra box.
BT Mobile is no longer sold - no new customers allowed, and existing customers are actively being encouraged to move.
The DV service is the same on BT or EE broadband.