06-11-2024 06:01 PM
I am trying to switch my broadband contract from Ee as they can’t provide full fibre broadband with a phone. When the new provider tries to switch they get this message.
The customer's data held by their existing provider will not allow a successful switch request. The customer needs to contact their service provider to resolve the issue before placing another switch request. An order can be placed outside of the switching process but the customer may need to cease services directly with their existing provider.
I have contacted EE a long and tedious process and they claim that there is no reason for a switch not to go through and they have not been contacted by any provider. The new provider is also unable to retain my old landline number. If I cancel the contract directly with EE they cut off my landline and broadband immediately which would not be ideal as my mobile reception is one bar if I am lucky
Any help gratefully received
Tatty
Solved! See the answer below or view the solution in context.
06-11-2024 10:19 PM
Thanks @Tattyb yes it means plenty.
So yes you are covered with Openreach fibre and you can get up to the max speeds offered by your ISP.
Your exchange is one of those covered by the St Andrews group who's dial code all start with the same 01334.
So your dilemma is if you move you will lose your current analogue phone line, and alas EE's legacy systems do not seem to allow you to upgrade and keep your number.
Vodafone are not being helpful and BT more expensive, not sure you are comparing like for like, there appears to be good deals on some packages at the moment, but easy to add more costs with TV and so on! Then you have the £500 cancellation charges to balance.
Quite a dilema.
G
06-11-2024 06:33 PM
@Tattyb Are you trying to move to a supplier not on the Openreach Network?
How much longer do you have on your current EE contract?
I am guessing you are trying to move to an Altnet - Virgin Media, City Fibre or something similar?
06-11-2024 06:48 PM
06-11-2024 07:07 PM
@Tattyb OK Vodafone are able to use the City Fibre network, which is seperate from the Openreach network that EE uses. And it seems they currently offer £100 to help with leaving fees - did you check with EE what your early termination fees would be?
From what you have said in your first post, I think all you can do is as suggested. Bit of a rock and a hard place, but other than Voda not being able to keep your landline for reason I can't work out - they should be able to, seems they are not trying though.
06-11-2024 07:17 PM
06-11-2024 07:41 PM
@Tattyb If it were Openreach that was providing fibre then EE would be able upgrade you, and potentially keep the same landline number on Digital Voice.
There does appear to be exceptions. If for example you are on a smaller exchange that will not be fibre connected, and the new fibre comes from a larger exchange in a nearby town that also has a different dial code.
To help get a better understanding, if you enter your phone number into the BTW DSL checker, use the desktop view, not the mobile one, hide your number and post the complete table and text below it. Make sure you hide your number - use the address version if the number dows not work - enter the post code, then pick your address from the drop down.
06-11-2024 08:17 PM
06-11-2024 08:27 PM
Yeah, that does not make too much sense. But it seems because you are on one of the legacy EE services you are another of those suffering when trying to upgrade to a New EE service.
Seems even stranger when they are encouraging BT customers over to EE.
I know it is something they are trying to resolve, however I am not aware of timescales.
06-11-2024 09:45 PM
06-11-2024 10:19 PM
Thanks @Tattyb yes it means plenty.
So yes you are covered with Openreach fibre and you can get up to the max speeds offered by your ISP.
Your exchange is one of those covered by the St Andrews group who's dial code all start with the same 01334.
So your dilemma is if you move you will lose your current analogue phone line, and alas EE's legacy systems do not seem to allow you to upgrade and keep your number.
Vodafone are not being helpful and BT more expensive, not sure you are comparing like for like, there appears to be good deals on some packages at the moment, but easy to add more costs with TV and so on! Then you have the £500 cancellation charges to balance.
Quite a dilema.
G