• expired

nbn 1000/50 $129/Month for 12 Months (FTTP and HFC Only), 50/20 $69/Month for 6 Months (New Users Only) @ Aussie Broadband

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BFPOWER20BFVALUE10

NBN 1000/50 (HFC and FTTP only)
Save $20/month for 12 months on our unlimited nbn™ 1000/50 plan with code BFPOWER20.^- Normally $149 per month

^Valid for our Home Ultrafast unlimited nbn™ plan. New nbn™ customers only. Offer ends 5:00pm AEDT on 12/12/2022. See full terms and conditions

Also, these are other plans

NBN 100/20 – 250/100 (250/100 FTTP only)
Save $10/month for 12 months on our unlimited nbn™ 100/20Mbps – 250/100Mbps plans with code BF10.
Valid for unlimited nbn™ plans between 100/20Mbps and 250/100Mbps. New nbn™ customers only. Offer ends 5:00pm AEDT on 12/12/2022

NBN 50/20 & FIXED WIRELESS
Save $10/month for 6 months on our 50/20Mbps unlimited nbn™ plan for 6 months with code BFVALUE10
Valid for our unlimited nbn™ 50/20 plan and unlimited Fixed Wireless+ plans. New nbn™ customers only. Offer ends 5:00pm AEDT on 12/12/2022.

*A new nbn™ customer is defined as an individual who signs up for a new nbn™ plan with Aussie Broadband at the time the offer is applied.

2 promo codes for the same product/service cannot be used together.

Referral Links

Referral: random (297)

$50 each for referrer & referee apply afterwards.

This is part of Black Friday / Cyber Monday deals for 2022

Related Stores

Aussie Broadband
Aussie Broadband

closed Comments

          • @[Deactivated]: NBN has plenty of competition well at least in the Business space, residential not so much, but in the business space TPG and Telstra both offer Fibre offerings that compete with NBN and Swoop Broadband have a Fixed wireless product that also competes with NBN as well, actually its better as you get symmetrical speeds.
            Also doesn't cost as much as NBNEE which is better for smaller businesses.
            Also a lot of local wireless providers around the place as well that offer decent speeds.

  • Am on this plan currently and its been solid (touch wood), be interested to know if anyone does come close…

    • +1

      I could never reach 700mbps on ABB but could get 960mbps on Launtel. Launtel's a very flexible option in imho

      • ABB speed test today from 80 on the 100 plan with tpg toi 898.7 with ABB.

        On a nest wifi router.

  • +8

    Really annoying that all of ABB offers are only ever new customer only.

    I think they've only had one offer in the past 3 years that has been for existing customers.

    • +2

      well i mean its pretty easy to become a 'new user' but the problem is ..who can you churn too without too much hassle but with a decent service in the mean time?

      • +1

        If you have FTTP, imo they generally feel quite similar on a 50 or 100 download speed. Might get a little more or a little less dropouts but nothing drastic. I've been with superloop, dodo, spintel, abb, belong, telstra, exetel and they're all the same same. If you're on FTTP you can also request to add another connection instead of replacing your current one to test and have no downtime

        • how do you request a new connection? say you are with Telstra and want to connect to ABB as well, do you have to call ABB and say you want a new line? wont they charge you the fee for that?

          • +1

            @botchie: Nah just ask to provision on a different uni-d port. So if your telstra connection is on uni-d 1 just ask to connect abb on uni-d 2. Once it's up and you've tested, just cancel your Telstra one

            • @Flintz: sounds easy, will keep in mind, thx

  • +1

    Oh man, just signed up for Leaptel on their 500/40 plan for $109 - decisions decisions.

    • I'm planning to do the same. Let me know how's the speed?

      thx

      • I did that a month ago and have been very happy consistent speed and Fantastic customer service as well

        • Leaptel seem to be $109 for 12 months only then $129 for the last 12 right?

  • +2

    Currently Superloop 100/40 for $79.95 but price returning back to $89.95 in January. Tempted to give this a go since its a 12 month offer, the speedboost mioht be nice.

  • +3

    *A new nbn™ customer is defined as an individual who signs up for a new nbn™ plan with Aussie Broadband at the time the offer is applied.

    Interesting no 6 month wait period to be a new customer now…

    • So did that mean just cancel them and go without it for a day (or even hours/mins) and then rejoin?

      • you can switch to launtel - they charge daily.

    • Thanks I have updated the description. Has anyone cancelled and rejoined without waiting 6 months?

      • +1

        I have, and it doesn't work. It remembers your address. Worse, it counts Origin as part of those 6 months. Now, you can call support, and they will usually just add the discount for you, but their automated process just says "Promo/referral code invalid."

  • +3

    I just spoke to Aussie BB on the phone - they can't make it available for current customers. I asked if I could cancel my account and re-join, they said yes, but the deal won't be available as the T&C's say it must be 6 months inbetween.

    • +1

      T&Cs used to say 6 months.

      A ‘new customer’ is defined as an individual who has not had an active broadband service with Aussie Broadband in the last six months or hasn’t been an authorised contact, residing at the same address as the primary contact, on an active broadband service with Aussie Broadband in the last six months.

      Now the T&Cs don't say anything about waiting 6 months.

      *A new nbn™ customer is defined as an individual who signs up for a new nbn™ plan with Aussie Broadband at the time the offer is applied.

      • +1

        Agree with this, no mention of 6 months on the new terms. I'd say their team are reading off the old script or someone messed up the new terms

      • In the general terms and cons it still has listed in the fine print as the not having an active account in 6 months with ABB. :(

    • These deals are generally subsidized by NBN for new signups.

      • Not really. While there have been before for upgrades to higher speed plans, these are marketing offers wholly from ABB and other providers.

      • Wholesale is $80. Almost no one offered it initially, because they were afraid it would cost too much in CVC. So Aussie decided to offer it for a ridiculously overpriced $149, and people paid it. So other providers matched the price. Eventually they realized higher speeds didn't cost them that much, so they raked in the profit. The cheapest gigabit I have seen, apart from free, is $99/mo.

    • they have a special retention number that you call about a competing offer from another provider and you get a $10-$20/month discount?

  • Ive recently moved over to Perth northern suburbs and the house I bought has a HFC connection. I am keen on the 1000/50 plan so ill most likely sign up.
    Thanks for posting.

    P.S. I have a large single story home with a lot of brick walls. Do you reckon the standard ISP Netcomm router is good enough? Or look for something else.
    Happy to pay good money for a good router. Mesh perhaps?

    • Can you access the roof and get a sparky to run a Cat6 cable through across the house? You can then get a access point installed in the ceiling at the other end which may be more reliable than a mesh.

      • +1

        If you have a tile roof, probably easier and cheaper to run the cat6 around the house, installed in the eaves. No need for a sparky to crawl in the dirty and dangerously hot roof space, and usually no mains cables to avoid.

        You can then get a access point installed in the ceiling

        If installing the cable in the eaves, the access point will be installed at the top of an exterior wall. So eaves won't work for a room with no exterior wall. Fortunately such rooms are rare.

    • I got a mesh router (well two sets which is 100% overkill) works really well. if a mesh doesnt work then look at running cable but it costs more and is a pita and you may need a mesh anyway.

      IM on 1000/50 myself.

  • I'm with superloop and still paying $119 for 600/40 FTTP after 6 months. That more than enough for my needs.

    • I pay that for my 1000/50 with Superloop

      • How’d you get 1000 down for 119? Currently paying $99 for 250 down

        • Pretty sure it was a deal on here

          Plan Type Superloop NBN 1000/50 - 3TB
          Monthly Fee $119.95

      • That nice if you getting ttbat speed. I'm in the middle of fFTTC and across the street is FTTN.. Can't complain when the rest of the suburb within 5km is FTTN.

    • I pay $69 for my 50/20 with Superloop, minus whenever I refer someone in which case I get 10% off. I have been with ABB before, and I don't feel it is worth paying more for.

  • +1

    Anyone recently churned with HFC from ABB and care to share their story, was it a smooth transition vs FTTP ??

    • I do it all the time on HFC, ABB to Superloop. It's never been longer than 5 mins in my experience.

  • -8

    New user BS.

  • +1

    Been with them couple of times, never found them any better than other cheaper alternatives.

    ACtually had better results with TPG than ABB

  • Still with Mate on HFC at 250/25 but only $89 per month, they were nice to maintain that discounted rate long after the initial 6 months offer. The price jump with ABB and superloop to bump up to 1000/50 kind of not worth it?

    • Unless you have more than two people streaming video at the same time, probably not.

    • Are you still getting good speeds with Mate? I was with them for years, and they were fantastic but then they dropped my 100/20 connection to like 1.2Mbps-10Mbps on fast.com speed test (which seems legit, borderline unusable) but still showing 90+ Mbps on speedtest.net

      Was a bit shifty so I swapped from them

  • Paying $119.90 per month for 1000/50 with superloop… Don't think I'll bother changing.

  • Do I count as a new user if I'm about to move house and sign up with the new address?

  • I'm on a 250/25 FTTP and that is rock solid for WFH even with multiple kids on YouTube at the same time etc. Some more upload would be good.

  • For the 1000/50 I would say Launtel is better (if you are using opticomm, otherwise NBN is 500/50). Exetel offers cheaper 50/20 plan.

  • Weird. Trying to apply BFPOWER20 to a 1000/50 deal and it says "Promo/referral code invalid"

  • -4

    50/20 $69/Month? Not a deal even though this is the mighty ABB, not going to give them a free kick.

    • TPG raised my connection price for the same thing to $75 so for the first time in decades I'm not with TPG anymore… I've hopped on this deal for the next 6 months 🙂

  • +2

    There's no performance difference between ABB and Superloop. I've been back and forth between both for years now.

  • Recently got access to HFC but yet to sign up / physically connect. Anyone know how to estimate speed availability without actually signing up? Trying to juggle if it is worth it over 5G ($70/month and unlimited usage, but variable speeds 100-300mbps, occasional drop outs).

    • +1

      1000/50 is the nbn HFC max.

      All 5G home broadband networks have what is called a Carrier Grade NAT. You can't turn off Carrier Grade NAT yourself and this blocks your router from port forwarding. Carrier Grade NAT can block remote access to a home server running Plex, gives you a strict (type 3) NAT for online PlayStation/Xbox/Switch/PC gaming, selected IP cameras can't be viewed remotely and more.

      If you need to use port forwarding ask Aussie BB to switch off Carrier Grade NAT.

      5G Home Broadband Vs nbn?

    • Hard to guage, but i know there have been maps to show how far you are from the node.
      We were at the arse end of the node, inside the optus 5g hole. However both our smartphones are blutick (obviously not an iphone newer than 2018), and i was getting 120mbs on amaysim 4g. Iinet nbn was 40mbs
      I daresay they are still tweaking settjngs.

      The most we have gotten is 927mbs

      • Those maps are for nbn FTTN. 1000/50 is the nbn HFC max.

  • I'm paying $134/m ongoing with Origin for the same service plus further discounts off gas and electricity.

  • I have a xt8 mesh wifi. Do I need a new modem? And can I still connect to the xt8

    • No you can use your same setup.

  • -1

    Been paying 99.99 for 100/20 for the past 2 years with ABB. Feel so ripped off after just switching to More for 60 bux for 205/25

  • Gotta love the loyalty tax with providers now. Churn and burn baby!

  • +3

    Got me beat why anyone is with Abb. They are literally the most expensive. And don't drop prices because everyone thinks there better and they have to cover there stupid advertising. Smarten up people. More is just as good and a super deal through CBA.

    • +3

      More use Vocus pipeline. Terrible routing to Asia if you are based in Perth. ABB is not bad but Superloop has good routing to Asia. Yes More is cheaper but you get what you pay for.

    • Cheap, reliable, fast - choose two.

  • seems like I am the only one who cares about static IP as it never gets mentioned with any deals. Currently on Exetel FTTC 50/20 unlimited with static IP ($65.99 p/m) but was thinking to upgrade to 1000/50 + static IP from AB but seems like static IP would be at an extra cost?

    • Aussie BB do static IP for $5 a month.

    • I use Cloudflare Tunnel and don't care about the static IP anymore.

      • You've got me all excited! Only reason I didn't sign up for the AusPost deal is beacuse of CGNAT. This might be the solution.

  • MyRepublic still $99 for 6 months 1000/50

  • We had our FTTN installed with ABB @ 2-3 weeks ago. Then had the spend another $700 on a Mesh Router system.

  • How good is Launtel compared to Superloop or ABB? I am thinking about moving… mainly use it for gaming so…

  • -3

    Worst customer service ever, cancelled my plan with them, back with Optus.

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