Access network versus backhaul

Your modem sync reflects the last-mile segment—VDSL, PON, or coax. Beyond that, ISPs aggregate traffic on links to their core and peer with content networks. Weak peering or under-provisioned backhaul hurts during big sports streams even if local sync is pristine.

How PON sharing works

Openreach FTTP GPON splits one optical line terminal port among dozens of premises via passive splitters. Symmetric peak rates remain high because optics are generous—but heavy simultaneous usage can nudge scheduling latency slightly.

What you can observe

If wired speeds crater only at 8–10 p.m., suspect congestion or heavy neighbour usage on wireless—not line faults. Traceroutes to diverse CDNs help differentiate. Major Tier-1-backed ISPs usually invest enough to keep domestic contention manageable.

Tip: Try tests to different servers—if one CDN path is bad, DNS or routing optimisations may help temporarily.

Picking providers

Reputation and regulator complaints data hint at oversubscription risk, but anecdotes vary by region. SwitcherMate focuses first on technologies truly available to you—contention tuning matters only after the correct bearer exists.

Measuring your reality

Keep monthly wired speed logs if you suspect chronic evening congestion—aggregates help providers justify capacity upgrades on backhaul, not just dismiss “Wi-Fi” reflexively.

Compare against neighbours on different retailers sharing the same PON—patterns isolate retailer issues from access network issues.