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No-Contract Broadband NZ 2026 — Best Month-to-Month Plans

Updated

Most NZ broadband providers now offer no-contract, month-to-month plans as their standard offering. This is a significant shift from a few years ago when 12–24 month contracts were common. Today, you can get fast fibre broadband with no lock-in from many providers — including the cheapest in the market.

Best no-contract broadband NZ 2026

Budget no-contract: Skinny (~$55/month Fibre 300) or BigPipe
Value + service: Voyager (~$70/month Fibre 300)
With power bundle: Electric Kiwi (~$65/month Fibre 300 as bundle)

All major NZ ISPs offer no-contract plans. A fixed-term contract should only be signed if it offers a meaningful price reduction or hardware benefit.

Why Choose No-Contract Broadband?

Flexibility to move: If you’re renting or may move in the next 12 months, no-contract means no exit fees.

Freedom to switch: If a better deal appears, you can take it immediately without penalty.

Market competition: With most providers on no-contract terms, the market is competitive and prices tend to stay sharp.

No financial risk: You’re never locked into paying a subpar price if a better option emerges.


Best No-Contract Broadband Plans NZ (2026)

Skinny Broadband — Cheapest Fibre

  • Fibre 300: ~$55/month
  • Fibre 900: ~$75/month
  • No contract, no data caps
  • Online/chat support only
  • Uses Spark’s network infrastructure

Full review →

BigPipe — Budget No-Frills

  • Fibre 300: ~$55/month
  • No contract, no data caps
  • Online-only support (no phone number)
  • Very basic product — pure internet access

Full review →

Voyager — Best Value with Service

  • Fibre 300: ~$70/month
  • Fibre 900: ~$85/month
  • No contract, no data caps
  • NZ-based phone support
  • Strongly rated for service quality

Full review →

Electric Kiwi — Best Bundle (with power)

  • Fibre 300: ~$60–$65/month (as bundle add-on to EK power)
  • No contract, no data caps
  • Combined billing with power account

Full review →

NOW Broadband

  • Fibre 300: ~$68/month
  • No contract, no data caps
  • Phone support available

Full review →


When Might a Fixed-Term Contract Make Sense?

Fixed-term contracts (usually 12 or 24 months) can be worth considering if:

  1. Meaningful discount vs. month-to-month — If the fixed plan is $15–$20/month cheaper and you know you’re staying put, the saving over 12 months ($180–$240) is significant
  2. Included hardware — Some 12-month plans include a free router ($100–$200 value) that you’d otherwise pay for
  3. New connection installation — First-time fibre connections sometimes require a fixed term; this is rarer now but still occurs

Watch out for: Some “deals” include a lower price for months 1–12 that reverts to a higher standard rate — the contract term means you’re locked in at that higher rate. Read the full 24-month total cost before signing.


Equipment with No-Contract Plans

Some no-contract providers include a free router with sign-up. Others charge for a router or expect you to provide your own. Options:

  • Free included router: Some providers include a basic router with activation
  • Router purchase: Usually $50–$100 for a basic ISP router at sign-up
  • Bring your own router: You can use any compatible router (most modern routers work with NZ fibre — check it supports PPPoE if required by your ISP)

For large homes or homes with poor WiFi coverage, consider a mesh WiFi system (TP-Link Deco, Netgear Orbi, or similar) regardless of which ISP you use.


Cancelling a No-Contract Plan

Since there’s no fixed term, you can cancel at any time. Most ISPs require 30 days’ notice (check your terms). When switching, your new ISP typically handles the transfer process — but you should notify your old ISP to close the account to avoid continued billing.

Return any rental equipment by the specified date to avoid being charged.