• expired

nbn/OptiComm Unlimited 50/20 $69/M, 100/20 $89/M, 250/25 $109/M, 1000/50 $129/M for 12 Months (New Customers) @ Aussie Broadband

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AFTERPAYDAY10AFTERPAYDAY20

As found on the Aussie Broadband website :
They are offering $10 off per month off for 12 months for 50/20 and 100/20 plans, and $20 off per month for 250/25 and 1000/50 plans.

Plan Original Price Discount Price Discount Code
50/20 $79 $69 AFTERPAYDAY10
100/20 $99 $89 AFTERPAYDAY10
100/40 $109 $99 AFTERPAYDAY10
250/25 $129 $109 AFTERPAYDAY20
250/100 $209 $189 AFTERPAYDAY20
1000/50 $149 $129 AFTERPAYDAY20

My Telstra discount expires tomorrow, Telstra wouldn't let me take advantage of the Telstra Day offer as I'm not a new customer, so this seemed to be good timing for me.

Of course, this might not suit everyone.

250/25 and 1000/50 is only available on HFC and FTTP.

250/100 is only available on FTTP.

Text below pasted from ABB site.

AFTERPAY DAY

Take advantage of our Afterpay Day offers!

Get $10 off for 12 months on our 50/20 or 100/20 unlimited nbn® plans using code AFTERPAYDAY10 OR get a MASSIVE $20 off for 12 months on our high-speed 250/25 or 1000/50 unlimited nbn® plans using code AFTERPAYDAY20.

*Hurry! Offer ends 11.59PM AEDT 19/03/2020. New residential customers only. Select nbn® Unlimited plans only. Full promo terms and conditions.


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.

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

Terms and conditions.

Referral Links

Referral: random (391)

$50 each for referrer & referee apply afterwards.

This is part of Afterpay Day sale for 2023

Related Stores

Aussie Broadband
Aussie Broadband

closed Comments

    • are you connected via ethernet cable or wifi? and is it FTTP or FTTN?

      • +1

        it's HFC. Now you said that, I realised that I've constantly tested the speed using wifi, lol. However, I'm looking to move to another provider since ping with Spintel in Melbourne is not ideal for online gaming.

        • +1

          Leaptel.com.au is your best bet for gaming and they have specials on right now

          • @memez: I was looking at Leaptel too

            • @legelas: save money and time, trace routes are exactly the same and GSL networks is a premium network

        • +1

          I'm in a similar situation: with Spintel in Tas but my ping is awful. That, added to increasing dropouts (about 8 times over the last weekend), has prompted me to jump on this ABB deal. If they don't work out, Leaptel get some good reviews so I might try there. Thanks for the tip @memez

        • you can try ABB for free by using the promo code MOVING on any plan, first month free if it does not improve then move to Leaptel

  • Is it difficult to reconfigure an existing modem with a current ISP for it to be compatible with a new provider after moving to a new ISP? Can someone explain what is involved, please?

  • Can someone please confirm that if I change to ABB, and call them I will definitely get a valid public IPv4 rather than their default CG-NAT?

    • +1

      I was able to call and get removed from CG-NAT but that was a few years ago, they still have the article up saying you can do it so assume new customers can still do it https://www.aussiebroadband.com.au/help-centre/internet/tech…
      If they ask for a reason just use one of the examples they have listed

      • Thanks for the reply. I think I'd better call up and ask them before switching. They may ran out of public IPs already.

        • +1

          Signup and get your connection activated. After that call Aussie to turn off Carrier Grade NAT with a reason from that link.

      • So what does this CG-NAT do?

        • Due to the limited number of IPV4 addresses in the world, they will assign the same IPV4 address to multiple customers and use NAT to distinguish traffic between customers.

          • @Beanvee: Yes and what impact on performance to me?

            • +1

              @TheCandyMan2020: Performance as in speed or stability? Likely none. The main issue is when you're trying to host services to the internet. CG-NAT tends to interfere with your own attempts to open specific ports to the internet since they'll get NAT'd again at the ISP level. Making things like hosting dedicated game servers, VPN endpoints, etc hard or impossible.

              For 99% of people they'd likely never notice or care they're behind CG-NAT.

              • @Beanvee: Thanks for that explanation.

                Running 1000/50 with Aussie Broadband for a couple of years. Called yesterday to turn off CG-NAT and they told me I had it turned off since June 2020!

  • +1

    overpriced for an average service

    • I havent used thier service, but I am on superloop for 75 a month for 100/20 and dont see the need to change. Service never drops. I dont see the need to pay this high.

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