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When will I get the NBN?

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The NBN fibre rollout will be underway or complete for up to one third of Australia’s homes and businesses by mid-2015

Work will commence, or be complete, to 3.5 million homes and businesses as part of NBN Co’s first three year national fibre rollout plan .

NBN Co has also begun announcing its next-generation fixed wireless and long term satellite rollouts, with announcements to date covering New South Wales, the Northern Territory, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia.

In the meantime, eligible rural and regional Australians have immediate access to better broadband services through the NBN Interim Satellite Service .

To see if the rollout in your area has already been announced, check out NBN Co’s rollout map .

What happens if I type in my post code or address and my home or business isn’t listed in the rollout?

NBN Co will be publishing updates to its fibre rollout plan in March each year on its website and more on its fixed wireless and satellite services, which it expects to complete in 2015, as it becomes available.

In general, when the NBN rollout has begun in an area, NBN Co will continue the rollout progressively from areas that have already been covered.

You can subscribe to NBN Co’s newsletter to stay up to date with all the latest rollout news here .

Why will I have to wait while everyone else gets the NBN?

We hear that a lot – and many of us at the Department of Broadband, Communication and Digital Economy are looking forward to the rollout in our streets too – but the answer is: NBN Co is connecting towns and suburbs according to its network plan.

It’s all about engineering. And NBN Co uses an algorithm to help decide where best to roll out the network next.

That said, the Australian Government has given NBN Co some guidelines. These include:

  •  construction should be across both rural and metropolitan areas
  • construction should be across all states and territories
  • the rollout in Tasmania should be finished by 2015
  • rolling out the fixed wireless and satellite networks as quickly as possible
  • giving priority to new developments

You can read more about how NBN Co selects where to roll out the network next here .

Why does it take so long to build the NBN?

It’s a fair question. Everyone wants better broadband. And most of us would prefer to have it now.

However, building the NBN is a big job. It will take about 10 years to replace our ageing copper telephone network.

NBN Co wrote a great blog post about why it will take 10 years to build the NBN and compared it to the copper network rollout that was built (mostly) in the early 20th century saying this:

“Many people don’t know how long it took to build Australia’s current copper telephone network. According to the Telemuseum in Queensland, Australia’s first government-owned phone exchange opened in 1880 – but much of the network was still being built at the time of World War II.”

The copper network, according to the above quote, took about 60 years to roll out – six times as long as the NBN rollout.

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