For the fourth time, following previous reports in 2021, 2022, and 2023, Tefficient has conducted an extensive fibre broadband pricing benchmark across nine European markets: Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, the UK, and France.
“Germany and the Netherlands have also experienced falling fiber prices, but Denmark has seen the biggest overall price drop over the four years.”
In a press release, Fiberalliancen introduces Tefficient’s latest analysis and makes it publicly available for download at the bottom of the page under ‘Læs hele analysen fra Tefficient‘. If you do not read Danish, don’t worry; the report is in English.
The release highlights the following key findings:
- Danish fibre broadband is often more affordable compared to other countries in the peer group.
- Despite a history of price reductions, Denmark saw the fastest increase in 2-year fees in 2024 among all countries. However, this follows a longer period of declining fees in Denmark:
- Between 2021 and 2024, the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for new fibre connections was -4.2%, marking the second-fastest decline after Germany.
- For existing connections, the CAGR over the same period was also -4.2%, representing the sharpest reduction among all comparison countries.
Tefficient’s analysis is comprehensive, with the findings presented through an extensive set of graphs.
Outcome graph showing the total average 2-year fee for the existing connection fibre case in purchase power parity adjusted Danish kroner.
Commissioned by Fiberalliancen.