• long running

nbn Business FTTP 500/200 $110/M, 1000/400 $130/M for 6 Months & Static IP (ABN Required, $125/M / $145/M Ongoing) @ Superloop

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Price drop on nbn Business FTTP 500/200 and 1000/400 with an included Static IP address.

ABN required and for new Superloop business customers.

500/200 $110/M for 6 Months & Static IP ($125/M Ongoing).
1000/400 $130/M for 6 Months & Static IP ($145/M Ongoing).

Eligible nbn FTTN and nbn FTTC locations can get a $0 nbn FTTP installation with this deal.

Returning customers, who have previously been with Superloop and already received a six (6) month discount promotion, will not be eligible for a new promotion for a period of twelve (12) months.

Credit Card Surcharge
Services that are paid by Credit Card (Visa, MasterCard or American Express) incur a 1.0% transaction fee. No fees on Direct Debit from your bank account.

Cancelling Your Plan
You may cancel your service at any time by giving Superloop thirty (30) days’ written notice, (including if you do not wish to continue to use the service after the end of the minimum term of a Fixed-Term Agreement).

Critical Information Summary.

Terms and Conditions.

Superloop Referrals

Referral: random (1084)

Referrer gets 10% off for 6 months.

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Comments

  • +3

    Residential current Superloop account holders looking to upgrade to this. You will need another new account as it a seperate product unless they fixed it already.

    • I tried this yesterday on my existing account and got rejected, so yes you will.

    • And despite what they tell you, they can't always merge the accounts if you have other services with them. I had 2 prepaid mobile numbers on my Superloop plan to get the bundling discount. Moved home NBN to a business plan and they told me I'd be fine to bring the mobile services over, but then afterwards told me it couldn't be done so I lost the discount

    • Do I need to cancel my residential plan first? Or will it just be transferred automatically to the new account?

      • You need to cancel, wait 30 days then apply for business

  • +1

    Would your place of residence need to be registered as for a business? Or are you eligible for this as long as you hold an ABN only?

    • Not in the past. I've had business internet (ADSL back then) paid via my business at my home office.

  • how well would a telstra gen 3 cope with this 1000/400, the upload speed?

  • +5

    Price drop on business plans but an increase in residential🥲

    • Yeah nbn resi wholesale price went up by $0.68/m to $1.71/m.

      A couple of providers 100/20 has gone up $5/m. 250/25 and 1000/50 hasn't gone up.

  • +10

    looking forward to 1000/400 residential at some point. On 1000/50 which is a ridiculous ratio. Need faster uploads

    • +12

      Launtel, Leaptel and Aussie BB do 1000/400 FTTP without an ABN.

      1000/100 (FTTP & HFC), 2000/100 (HFC), 2000/200 (FTTP) and 2000/500 (FTTP) is coming in 4 months.

      • +4

        $200 per month for 1000/400 is hard to justify at the moment as im paying $88 for 1000/40. Should hopefully come down in price in a few months

        • +3

          I wound up going on Leaptel for $130 - 500/200. The pricing structure is incredibly annoying though, but it was all designed to stop businesses using residential plans.

          • @freefall101: And by extension, price out residents from torrenting Linux ISOs with high-upload plans.

        • $88 for 1000/40 ? Which provider?

      • +1

        Who does HFC 1000/100 cant seem to find anyone?

        • +2

          Starting in Sept.

          • +1

            @Twix: Yeah, im on 1000/50 waiting for 2000/100 just for the upload speeds tbh, dont even have 2.5gb at home

      • Might be a good idea to switch to the precursor plan for the plan you want a little while before the change. NBN is holding the price but that doesn‘t mean ISPs will.

    • +2

      Check out Launtel, we've been on their 1000/400 service for a while - It's epic for WFH.

  • +2

    I wish we could get better uploads on HFC.

    • It's not the best however HFC upload is changing from 50 to 100.

      • +2

        Yeah thank goodness. Our street is upgrading the HFC but that seems like a waste compared to upgrading to ftth.

        • Everyone agrees. Yet it will still be 10 years before we see any movement towards FTTP overbuilds

  • +7

    1000/400 would be sweet. Now that the ALP are in power until the 30s, the rollout for FTTP for everyone should be clean and clear.

    • +3

      HFC is staying around unless nbn get the funds to replace it. I reckon the nbn will mostly be FTTP, HFC, Fixed Wireless and LEO satellite. FTTN and FTTC will go.

    • Why do you think alp will be in power until 2030?

      • Because Lieberals are full of inbred tomatoes lol their possible leader could be Angus Captain Stupid Taylor. Labor gonna win 2028 at least and possibly 2031

  • +5

    That 500/200 is a great price. Plex server dream plan.

    • +2

      Great for what Australian prices currently are and have been. But still feels pretty shite overall though tbh.

      A truly affordable 100/100 plan would be a game changer imo.

  • This is very good, currently have $105 for 250/25 with superloop, and a fixed ip address. $110 for 500/200 looks very tempting. Whats it like for residential to business change? Would be quite fast with FTTP, but how does it work in practice with a new business account?

  • +1

    If it wasnt for the ABN requirement i'd go for that 1000/400 instantly.

    • Hopefully other providers drop their price soon. Superloop went early.

      • Is that in the NBN agenda?

        They have new plans coming in September and their 1000/100 plan was still more expensive than this $130

        • 250/100, 500/200 and 1000/400 wholesale prices are going down. 1000/50 wholesale price is increasing from $72.22/m to $73.93/m July 1.

          Who's plan is more expensive?

          • @Twix: Oh I remember seeing the retail price on the reddit post and the new 1000/100 or whatever is replacing the 1000/50 was going to be bit more expensive I thought. Let me
            Find the post

    • Getting an ABN is easy. You should do it.

      • So you definitely need an ABN to get this deal?

        If signing up for an ABN, does that affect your tax at all? Do you just tell them you didn't earn any money come tax time?

        I'm guessing you sign up as a sole trader?

    • anyone can get an ABN… they're free. just say you're starting a business

    • I signed up to one of these and realised afterwards I'd given them my old ABN, which was closed. I don't think they check them that thoroughly.

  • +1

    I wonder if I can get Aussie Broadband to price match the 1000/400 plan. I would absolutely love that.

    Silly NBN.

    • +1

      Same boat here, would love to stay with ABB but paying $130 for 1000/50 with ABN account.

      • Man absolutely love Aussie. They have been so good. When I first got into networking one time I lost internet because I was doing dumb stuff and their on call person -during Christmas- helped me through the issue and realised I had 2 devices that were trying to be routers lol.

        Never once had a call with them that didn’t help me solve my issue, including removing me from CGNat

    • +1

      They won't, I just tried. It's $199 p/m or best they would come down to is $179 for 6 months

  • Today I got an email that price will increase in 30 days from $75pm to $95pm eventho I was on a 12 months fixed price started in January 2025.
    Anyway, I cancelled Superloop plan… pity from them not honouring the 12 months offer they gave me.

    • I'm on the $85/mo 250/25 plan, no notification of a price increase yet.

      If you're happy with the network and just not the price, churn to Exetel and keep switching between them on sign up deals. It's the same network.

  • They must have a deal with NBN, no way they're paying $230/mo wholesale for 1000/400 and selling it for a loss just to get customers on board prior to the price reduction later this year.

    • Why do you think 1000/400 wholesale price is $230/mo?

      Aussie Broadband currently sells it for $199 with no discounts…

      • the 1000/400 Mbps product will be reduced by $105 to $125 per month

        https://www.nbnco.com.au/corporate-information/media-centre/…

        Unless they've completely misworded and mean it will be reduced from $125 to $105. Haven't actually looked up the official wholesale price list. That would make a lot more sense if it's currently $125, reducing to $105 - then these retail prices make sense.

        • Yeah bit a mess of an article but
          if $125 wholesale is $199 retail
          $105 wholesale would be $$179…

          So $130, just $25/mo is a pretty dang slim margin. I don’t know…

          • @Larsson: Yeah, looking at it again I assume they mean $125 is dropping to $105. Makes way more sense given the retail pricing.

            $25/mo is a decent margin compared to the other plans currently, the margins are very small for NBN unless it's actual business plans with dedicated bandwidth (I forget what it's called in the wholesale agreement, but it's far more costly. Those plans you see for like $10k/year sometimes), those margins can be literal thousands (these don't have any kind of dedicated CVC or anything fancy beyond consumer plans on the simple 1000/400 plans - only higher upload speeds, and that costs them nothing because the upload side of CVC isn't ever utilised currently)

            • @Dyl: Yeah the business plans are like so much more expensive. They have 99.99% uptimes and 24/7 support etc. whole different story I think.

          • @Larsson: But ongoing it's $145. So $40/mth. Most people on a business plan don't regularly churn.

      • Wholesale is $130, drops to $91 in Sept. High price to pay for whats effectively a shaping policy on the NBN end.

        • What the hell is the article on about then???? Doesn't relate to wholesale prices at all

          Unless they mean retail is going to drop around $105 to $125/mo, that's probably close to accurate

          • @Dyl: Would be instant switch for me!

          • @Dyl: Wholesale is what RSP pays to NBN, RSP still needs to make some money, otherwise they wouldnt bother.

            • @BargainKen: Yeah I’m aware, the margins are very tight though (or at least currently), isn’t uncommon for an ISP to only make $5-10 over wholesale (I think nbn gives out deals on higher plans sometimes though to encourage uptake, because they’re generous deals but very strict about when they expire)

              I think the article I link means expected retail price not wholesale, as a reduction of $105 to $125 otherwise makes no sense and doesn’t match into available anywhere else.

        • Oh does it? Honestly would love an affordable decent upload speeds. Do you have a source for the $91 somewhere please?

          Also what’s a shaping policy? Doesn’t upload essentially translate to a bandwidth used (CVC they call it)?

          I mean it’s all made up by NBN to recoup the costs, isn’t it? I actually don’t know, and would love to learn, but isn’t it all the same cost? Essentially the hardware is there they just sent you stuff faster or slower? So there’s no actual cost other than allocating you a larger bandwidth?

          • @Larsson: Whirlpool as usual https://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/91mxkyv4

            https://www.nbnco.com.au/corporate-information/media-centre/…

            From September 2025, the company will also reduce the effective wholesale price of its 500/200 Mbps plus Pro package and ~1000/400 Mbps1 plus Pro package. The indicative FY26 price from September 2025 is $76.50 for the 500/200 Mbps product and $91.93 for the ~1000/400 Mbps1 product. Both Pro products include an SLA to investigate and work to resolve any unplanned network outages or faults within four hours4.

            • @BargainKen: That SLA is quite generous for semi consumer plans (they call them business, but compared to the actual business-grade plans designed for professional use with actual business level SLAs they’re magnitudes cheaper)

              • @Dyl: Its still a Traffic Class 4 (TC4) product, so "Best-Effort", only differentiating factor is the eSLA whcih translates to NBN "supposedly" getting off their arse sooner to resolve.

                • @BargainKen: That’s the term - traffic class

                  When I say actual business plans I mean the higher priority traffic classes. TC4 is consumer level still, a 4 hour SLA on that actually isn’t bad (even if it’s not guaranteed, as long as they do put in the effort and staffing to try and meet it)

                  • +1

                    @Dyl: Fibre doesnt really go down all that much TBH, its all the legacy crap that keeps breaking down (FTTN, HFC, FTTC etc) I think NBN released a report on the breakdown of callouts. The so-called "Cheaper" NBN ended up costing much more in the long term in support costs.

                    • @BargainKen: Yeah outages should be rare with fibre, but the 4 hour timeframe when there is one is quite a decent goal. I would assume copper is actually a lot quicker to troubleshoot when there’s an outage because it’s very likely in the last leg (ie the copper wire)

                      Not familiar with what hardware they actually use (switching wise), but depending on the available monitoring troubleshooting a fibre outage could be quite time consuming opposed to copper where you can almost always assume the copper wire is (profanity)

                      If they meet the goal or not, given there’s no guarantee or compensation… I guess we’ll see.

  • Tempted to move because of cost but ABB has been super reliable and support is fantastic

    • Superloop is quite reliable but their support sucks compared to ABB. They also up prices a lot for loyal customers apparently, but ABB has been doing that slowly over time too in all honesty.

      Parents had 2x NBN and 2x phone plans with ABB, overtime they upped the total bill by over $40. Retention team offered them like $5 off as their best offer, was a joke. Forced to switch, even if it’s just to switch back later on a sale. Five years as loyal customers with multiple plans and retention team couldn’t do anything for them.

  • What if you pick a random ABN from the register to apply for a plan? Will ATO or ASIO come knocking?

  • I was about to change from 1000/50 to 500/200 then I read 1000/50 will change to 1000/100 in September so I'll take that instead.

    • +1

      Thanks, and here is the link https://www.superloop.com/blog/nbn-speed-upgrade/ very nice, 250/25 goes to 750/50, is another change also happening in September. The 2Gbps also is interesting.

      • Just had a read of this, thanks.

        Does anyone know, with the new NTD, is that going to have multiple ports? I'd still prefer one with multiple ports rather than a single port as it gives the option if you want a second connection for whatever reason (troubleshooting, comparison between different RSPs). I've actually had two connections at the same time when comparing RSPs. when I switched to SL 1000/50 at the start of this year, if the current NTD were capable, I would have also gotten a Launtel 1000/50 at the same time to compare the two, but unfortunately the limit is something like 1300/1400Mbps total on the current NTDs so you can't have multiple Gigabit services.

          • +1

            @Twix: Awesome, thanks. I'll likely get the 4-port one then. Sounds like you can also fit it on the same brackets the current 4-port one is?

            Any idea if anyone can request the 4-port version and/or if there will be an additional cost to get the 4-port one?

            • +1

              @Ice009: Here is the FTTP 4-port connection box retrofitted to the existing FTTP NTD bracket.

              I think it's this however don't quote me on it until September.

              1-port $0 with the 2000/200 speed tier and for new FTTP installations.
              4-port $0 with the 2000/500 speed tier or if you have multiple services.
              4-port $100 for anyone else that wants it.

              • +1

                @Twix: Alright, thanks. That's actually pretty reasonable. If you get the 2000/500, it'll likely cost a fair amount of money, so them doing it for free would be good. If you get a lesser plan, I guess you don't need it over the single port box, so you should have to pay for it.

  • I wonder if anyone has left Superloop on a residential and returned on a business plan and still got the discount, asking for a friend :p

    • Call up and say you want to switch from nbn residential to nbn totalbiz 500/200 or 1000/400.

  • What's everyone telling themselves to justify the 1000/400? Mainly the 400 upload rate? Like what's the need for speed?

    • +1

      It is useful for those who upload for example, videos to YouTube regularly and want this to go faster.

      • Thanks. Yeah, I made a forum post and got some great feedback from the OZB family. Much appreciated.

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