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Mid Sussex Broadband Coverage

Ranked #148 of 361 UK local authorities by full-fibre coverage. 80.4% is above the UK national average of 77.5%.

The verdict

Mid Sussex is ahead of the UK average for full-fibre — ranked #148 of 361 UK local authorities (top 41%) with 80.4% full-fibre coverage, 2.9pp above the 77.5% UK average.

#148 of 361 UK authorities
Top 41% for full-fibre coverage
+2.9pp vs 77.5% UK average
0.1% below USO minimum

About Broadband in Mid Sussex

Mid Sussex is a local authority district in England with 73,053 premises in the Ofcom Connected Nations 2025 dataset. Full-fibre (FTTP) broadband is available to 80.4% of premises, and gigabit-capable connectivity reaches 80.4%. Superfast broadband (≥30 Mbit/s) is accessible to 98.1% of premises. Mid Sussex ranks 148th nationally out of 361 local authorities by full-fibre coverage.

The gigabit and full-fibre figures reflect the proportion of addresses that can order an FTTP connection from at least one provider — availability does not imply that every household has taken up a service. Full-fibre take-up across all premises stands at 41%, and among premises where coverage is available the figure is 51%. Ofcom defines gigabit-capable as the ability to receive download speeds of at least 1,000 Mbit/s, which in practice means a full-fibre or qualifying cable network must pass the property.

Some 0.1% of premises remain below the Universal Service Obligation threshold of 10 Mbit/s download / 1 Mbit/s upload, indicating a modest but real connectivity gap for the most remote properties in the area. Figures are drawn from operator network-coverage data submitted to Ofcom and verified through the Connected Nations 2025 methodology. See our methodology page for full details on how premises counts and coverage percentages are calculated.

80.4%
Full-Fibre (FTTP)
80.4%
Gigabit-Capable
98.1%
Superfast (≥30 Mbit/s)
0.1%
Below USO

Coverage by Technology — Mid Sussex

Broadband coverage by technology type — Mid Sussex, Ofcom Connected Nations 2025

Full-Fibre (FTTP)80.4%Gigabit-capable80.4%Ultrafast (≥300 Mbit/s)80.5%Superfast (≥30 Mbit/s)98.1%NGA (any next-gen)99.8%
Broadband coverage by technology type — Mid Sussex, Ofcom Connected Nations 2025

Where Mid Sussex Sits Nationally

Mid Sussex vs every UK local authority

Full-fibre coverage distribution across all 361 UK local authorities. Mid Sussex's 80.4% places it in the highlighted band.

80.4% Top 41% ranked #148 of 361 UK authorities

10–19%: 3 authorities 20–29%: 2 authorities 30–39%: 3 authorities 40–49%: 10 authorities 50–59%: 24 authorities 60–69%: 65 authorities 70–79%: 103 authorities 80–89%: 93 authorities 90–99%: 58 authorities Mid Sussex 0% 100%

every UK local authority, bucketed by full-fibre coverage

Source: Ofcom Connected Nations 2025 (July 2025, r01)

Full Coverage Data

Metric Coverage Definition
Full-Fibre (FTTP) 80.4% Fibre to the Premises — optical fibre all the way to the property
Gigabit-Capable 80.4% ≥1,000 Mbit/s download speed available
Ultrafast Broadband (≥300 Mbit/s) 80.5% UFBB — ≥300 Mbit/s download speed available
Ultrafast (≥100 Mbit/s) 80.6% ≥100 Mbit/s download speed available
Superfast (≥30 Mbit/s) 98.1% SFBB — ≥30 Mbit/s download speed available
NGA (any next-generation access) 99.8% Any NGA network available
Below USO Threshold 0.1% Below 10 Mbit/s down / 1 Mbit/s up USO minimum
Full-Fibre Take-Up (all premises) 41% % of all premises actively using a full-fibre connection
Full-Fibre Take-Up (covered premises) 51% % of premises where FTTP is available that have taken it up
Total Premises 73,053 All premises in Ofcom's matched dataset
National Rank (Full-Fibre) #148 / 361 Ranking among all UK local authorities by full-fibre coverage

Coverage Analysis

Mid Sussex's full-fibre coverage of 80.4% places it at rank 148 nationally. The gap between full-fibre availability (80.4%) and gigabit availability (80.4%) reflects whether any qualifying cable networks supplement the FTTP rollout in this district. Where the two figures are close, full-fibre is effectively the sole gigabit delivery mechanism.

Superfast coverage at 98.1% gives a sense of the floor for most residents — the majority of premises in Mid Sussex can receive at least 30 Mbit/s. The USO gap of 0.1% represents premises that cannot yet access the government-mandated minimum of 10 Mbit/s download and 1 Mbit/s upload. In rural local authorities this figure can reach double digits; in dense urban areas it typically approaches zero.

Take-up data provides a demand-side view. With 41% of all premises actively using full-fibre, Mid Sussex gives a clear picture of how quickly residents are switching to future-proof connections as they become available.

Related

Compare all local authorities

Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the full-fibre broadband coverage in Mid Sussex?

According to Ofcom Connected Nations 2025 (July 2025, r01), 80.4% of premises in Mid Sussex have access to full-fibre (FTTP) broadband. Full-fibre connects properties using optical fibre all the way from the exchange, enabling gigabit-speed connections. The UK national average is approximately 77.5%.

How does Mid Sussex compare nationally for broadband coverage?

Mid Sussex ranks 148th out of 361 UK local authorities by full-fibre coverage (80.4%). Gigabit-capable coverage stands at 80.4% and superfast (≥30 Mbit/s) coverage at 98.1%. Figures are from Ofcom Connected Nations 2025.

Does Mid Sussex meet the broadband Universal Service Obligation?

The Broadband Universal Service Obligation (USO) guarantees access to at least 10 Mbit/s download and 1 Mbit/s upload. In Mid Sussex, 0.1% of premises fall below this threshold. If your property cannot receive the USO minimum, you may be able to request a qualifying connection from an eligible provider. See Ofcom's guidance for details.

Source: Ofcom, Connected Nations 2025 — UK Fixed Broadband Coverage (July 2025, r01). Retrieved and formatted by Kiznis Studio Editorial. Disclaimer: Coverage figures show availability, not guaranteed service quality or actual take-up. Published under the Open Government Licence v3.0.