List of VDSL and VDSL2 deployments

This is a list of very-high-bit-rate digital subscriber line (VDSL) and very-high-bit-rate digital subscriber line 2 (VDSL2) deployments.

The term VDSL can either refer specifically to ITU-T G.993.1 (first generation VDSL, officially abbreviated as "VDSL", unofficially also called "VDSL1"), or may be used as an umbrella term for both ITU-T G.993.1 and ITU-T G.993.2 (second generation VDSL, officially abbreviated "VDSL2").

Africa

Mauritius (VDSL)
  • VDSL is being rolled out mostly in the Hotel Industry in Mauritius by a private Network Solution Integrator company, Enterprise Data Services Ltd (EDS LTD). EDS is not an ISP, but provide the VDSL in hotels as opposed to the expensive cost of fiber optic. The service enables the hotels to provide both wired and wireless Broadband Internet access, video on-demand and music on-demand as well as IP telephony to the residents. Since November 2004, till date, EDS has already completed such installation in 12 hotels.
South Africa (VDSL2)
  • Telkom SA began trials and deployment of VDSL2 enabled MSAN exchanges in 2012, with product offerings of 20/2Mbit/s and 40/3Mbit/s.[1][2] It is planned that there should be a full replacement of all current DSLAM's with the new MSAN cabinet units, enabling a shorter local loop. As of June 2014, Telkom SA had deployed VDSL2 services to 180 neighbourhoods across the country with plans for another 75.[3]
Tunisia (VDSL2)
  • Tunisie Telecom began trials of VDSL2 broadband access in April 2013. But until now, no commercialization procedure has been launched.[4]

Asia

Bahrain (VDSL2)
  • Lightspeed Communication announced that they will begin deploying VDSL2 technology for residential and business customers in 2012. Downstream speed will be up to 80 Mbit/s.[5] The service is yet to launch as of July 2013.
Hong Kong (VDSL)
  • VDSL is offered by HGC[6] and PCCW. A 10 Mbit/s up and up to 30 Mbit/s down connection costs less than US$11–34 per month with an 18-month to 24-month contract (price is negotiable and each customer get different prices and plans), with unlimited traffic.
Hong Kong (VDSL2)
  • PCCW Limited (Netvigator) and Hutchison Global Communications (HGC) have deployed VDSL2 technology to serve residential and business customers since 2008. Netvigator provides up to 100 Mbit/s downstream and 30 Mbit/s upstream broadband service in VDSL2,[7] while HGC asserts that to provide up to 100 Mbit/s downstream and 100 Mbit/s upstream service.[8] However, due to equipment technical difficulties, HGC connection is pretty unstable. HGC is able to provide both 50 Mbit/s downstream and upstream in most districts of the coverage.
India (VDSL)
  • VDSL plan launched by MTNL[9] (ISP for Delhi NCR and Mumbai[10] for Mumbai city on 25 December 2009. The plan costs US$110 and has a limit of 20GB for data transfer amount and 20 Mbit/s for data transfer speed. After crossing the limit the user has to pay approximately $10 per GB downloaded.[11] Bharti Airtel has introduced a new VDSL plan on 28 March 2010 with speeds of 50 Mbit/s and 100GB of data transfer.The plan cost $300. Currently Bharti Airtel offers VDSL plans starting at $30(24Mbit/s/30GB) and going to $60(40Mbit/s/90GB) While Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) has also launched 3 VDSL plans 10 Mbit/s,[12] 16 Mbit/s and 24 Mbit/s which costs approximately $75, $100 and approximately $140, respectively.[13]
India (VDSL2)
  • MTNL has deployed VDSL technology in Mumbai and offers up to 20 Mbit/s downstream.
  • Airtel has announced 50 Mbit/s Plans using VDSL2.[14]
Israel (VDSL)
  • On August 28, 2009 Bezeq communication company started testing VDSL with 20, 25, 30 and 40 Mbit/s (asymmetric, up speed 1 Mbit/s) in certain areas in north Israel.
  • VDSL services are provided since late 2009 using the Next generation network (NGN) of Bezeq communication company. As of 26/02/2012 NGN is still not available in all areas of the country. The maximum download speed is up to 100 Mbit/s.[15]
Israel (VDSL2)
  • Bezeq has deployed FTTx with VDSL2 with brand name NGN in September 2009 offering speeds of 20 and 30 Mbit/s downstream and 1 Mbit/s upstream.[16] In October 2010 Bezeq has deployed 50 and 60-100 Mbit/s downstream speeds and limited upstream speeds of up to 1 Mbit/s.In April 2012 Bezeq has limited upstream speeds to 1.5 Mbit/s. In the beginning of 2013 Bezeq will deploy 200 Mbit/s downstream speed using two copper pairs bonding. As of December 2014 Bezeq offers 40/3 Mbit/s downstream/upstream and 100/3 Mbit/s downstream/upstream options in most of the country. As of 2016 Bezeq is also providing VDSL2-Vectoring infrastructure.
Japan (VDSL)
Macau (VDSL2)
  • CTM start to test VDSL2 at the 3rd season of 2007. First will be tested in two main buildings in Macau.
Malaysia (VDSL/VDSL2)
  • Alcatel Lucent is also a provider of VDSL in Malaysia.
  • Telekom Malaysia is deploying VDSL/VDSL2 with its UniFi service in high-rise and residential apartment buildings.
  • VDSL Network S.B.[17] has also been a provider of VDSL technology for more than 3 years in Malaysia.
  • Telekom Malaysia deployed (FTTx-Residential) and (VDSL2-High Rise) with brand name UniFi in March 2010 offering symmetrical speeds of 5, 10 and 20 Mbit/s & asymmetrical speed of 30, 50 and 100 Mbit/s.
Pakistan (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is offered by PTCL to provide data rates of Up to 100 Mbit/s for 20,000 PKR (US$200) per month. PTCL also offers 100 Mbit/s data rates on the GPON service in selected areas of Pakistan. The 100 Mbit/s connection is based on a dual bonded VDSL link.
Pakistan (VDSL2)
  • PTCL is the first service provider worldwide to deploy a commercial VDSL2 Bonding solution and offers speed up to 50 Mbit/s — The highest speed offered by any Internet Service Provider in the country.Sky Telecom is also VDSL service provider in AJK. It also deploy fiber network for commercial users.
Philippines (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is secretly being rolled out by PLDT along with its Fiber-Optic lines, called Fibr. It is meant for subscribers who wishes to avail data rates offered by Fibr, but exclusively have POTS facilities.
  • VDSL2 is one the technology offered for Globe Telecom's Tattoo Platinum Broadband. Available in high end residential developments in Metro Manila where Globe's Torque, the company's answer to PLDT Fibr, is not offered or available.
Saudi Arabia (VDSL2)
  • Saudi Telecom Company (STC) The Largest Operator in Middle East launched VDSL2 service in December 2011 offering various speed packages including 40 Mbit/s Downstream and 10 Mbit/s Upstream to provide Triple-play services including High-Speed Internet (HSI), IPTV (SD and HD) and VoIP from single VDSL CPE with built-in Wi-Fi. This complements STC's existing ADSL2+ installed base which already offers download speed of up to 20 Mbit/s as part of Fixed Broadband Access (FTTx) Network
Singapore (VDSL2)
  • SingTel tied up with Ericsson to deploy a technical trial of VDSL2 starting June 2006. However, no service plans announced yet and SingTel is preferring FTTH over VDSL2.
South Korea (VDSL)
  • KT and other several providers offer VDSL in the place where FTTH is not available. The speed is varied from 4 Mbit/s to 100 Mbit/s by payment plans, about US$25–40 per month.
Sri Lanka (VDSL2)
  • Sri Lanka Telecom announced the soft launch of its VDSL2 advanced fixed broadband technology in May 2013 and is planning to expand the service in the near future.[18]
Taiwan (VDSL)
  • The VDSL modem is, and never marketed as such, a final link between the telephone line and their building's fiber terminal. As of 2013, FTTB service bandwidth is 100 Mbit/s for both download and upload, and is a major improvement over ADSL in terms of attaining maximum contract bandwidth.
Taiwan (VDSL2)
  • October 2007, Chunghwa Telecom (CHT) has awarded ZyXEL Communications to provide VDSL2 equipments (DSLAM and CPE) for its "Next Generation Access Network" project. The project involves 340-thousand lines and will provide high speed Triple play services to these subscribers.
Thailand (VDSL)
  • True Corp announced on 30 June 2010 that it would offer "Ultra hi-speed Internet", a VDSL2 services, for high-end condominiums. It's said to be Thailand's first ISP to provide a VDSL2 services. True Corp will offers two packages a 50 Mbit/s downstream and 3 Mbit/s upstream or 30 Mbit/s downstream and 2 Mbit/s. There are no specific date about when it will be available, it said that soon, within 2010.
Thailand (VDSL2)
  • July 2010, True Online by True Corporation has released the Ultra Hi-Speed Internet . The first VDSL2 commercial services with the services is up to 50 Mbit/s downstream and up to 20 Mbit/s upstream.
  • 3BB by Triple T has deployed VDSL2 Internet Solutions, offering VDSL2 Internet services is up to 50 Mbit/s downstream and up to 20 Mbit/s upstream.

Central America and the Caribbean

Dominican Republic (VDSL2)
  • Claro offers speeds ranging from 1Mbit/s down and 256kbit/s up to 50Mbit/s down and 2Mbit/s up. The upgrade to VDSL2 was required to provide enough bandwidth for the company's IPTV, data, and voice services all running on their POTS network.
Jamaica (VDSL2)
  • FLOW is to begin offering speeds of up to 50 Mbit/s over their existing islandwide copper network in August 2016. They company has (to date) deployed 132 MSANs islandwide. The rationale for the upgrade was to ensure parity between speeds offered on their HFC network & Copper network. In addition, it will also allow for further TV penetration using IPTV (to serve areas not reached by their HFC network) as well as offer speeds over 4 times faster than their current highest end package ADSL package (i.e. 12 Mbit/s down & 1 Mbit/s up).

Europe

Austria (VDSL)
  • Telekom Austria started providing VDSL2 under the name Gigaspeed in rural areas in November 2009. As of November 2010 Telekom Austria started a widespread campaign to bring VDSL2 (GigaSpeed) to as many customers as possible in metropolitan areas.[19]
Austria (VDSL2)
  • Telekom Austria started providing VDSL2 under the name Gigaspeed (now 'Glasfaser Speed') in rural areas in November 2009.[20]
Belgium (VDSL)
  • Belgacom was one of the early adopters of VDSL1, which has since been outphased for the more widely used VDSL2, supplying up to 70/10[21] Mbit/s (DS/US) of videograde quality to support its single-, dual- and mostly triple-play customers all over Belgium. The technology deployment accompanied a large-scale FTTC investment.
Belgium (VDSL2)
  • Belgacom (now Proximus) has rolled out Alcatel-Lucent VDSL2 equipment in more than 24,000 street cabinets (Q3-2015) with more than 1,000,000 VDSL2 customers (Q3-2012). Belgacom also provides VDSL2 to smaller enterprises. Line speeds go up to 100 Mbit/s downstream (with vectoring) and 10 Mbit/s upstream. Digital TV service Belgacom TV is delivered over this VDSL2 platform.
  • Some internet providers are re-selling Belgacom VDSL2 subscriptions.
  • Since the end of May 2009, Dommel offers VDSL2. The maximum speed is 50 Mbit/s.
  • EDPnet is offering VDSL2 since November 2009. The maximum speed is 50 Mbit/s. (Some get 70 Mbit/s).
  • All Belgian Scarlet ADSL customers are being moved to the Belgacom VDSL2-based network due to the sale of the Scarlet network to SNCB/NMBS-subsidiary Syntigo.
Croatia (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is offered since June 2013 only by a smaller telecom H1 Telekom in urban areas. Speeds go from 20/2 to 50/15 Mbit/s. It's also available in triple play packages that include TV and telephone. However, internet-only packages are not available: customers have to get it with phone service.
Croatia (VDSL2)
  • H1 telekom is providing VDSL2 to customers since August 1, 2013 and it offers speeds up to 50/15 Mbit/s flat rate
Czech Republic (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is offered by Telefónica O2 in most areas. While the full speed offered is 40 Mbit/s, in some areas only slower speeds can be attained (as of January 2013). O2 do not provide the end user with the ability to customize the upload / download stream, however it can be arranged with its level 2 technical support assistance after clear expression of being aware of potential instability of the connection.
Czech Republic (VDSL2)
  • Telefónica Czech Republic started public testing of VDSL service in mid-2009.[22] VDSL2 was launched in May 2011, with availability in about half of the households. Offered speeds included 2/0.2 Mbit/s, 16/1 Mbit/s and 25/2 Mbit/s.[23] In 2012, the speed was increased from 16/1 to 20/2 Mbit/s and from 25/2 to 40/2 Mbit/s.[24] In November 2015 upload speed was increased up to 4Mbit/s [40/4 Mbit]
Cyprus (VDSL2)
  • No VDSL products have appeared from telecom operators in Cyprus yet. OCECPR (NRA) has amended the Frequency Management Plan to facilitate the introduction of VDSL2 and launched its respective consultation.[25]
Denmark (VDSL)
  • TDC is providing VDSL in two larger city areas in Copenhagen and Aarhus from February 2008, most urban parts (100 largest city areas) was announced for March 2008, but this was changed to September 2008. Fullrate and Telenor are providing VDSL the same places as TDC, as they have access to their nodes.
Denmark (VDSL2)
  • TDC launched VDSL2 on January 21, 2008.[26]
  • Telenor launched VDSL2 on August 23, 2013.[27]
  • Fullrate launched VDSL2 on September 16, 2009,[28] but only for customers on exchanges with Fullrate's own equipment, rather than exchanges with leased equipment from TDC. On September 29, 2010, Fullrate announced that they were able to provide VDSL2 to all Fullrate customers, regardless of exchange.[29]
Estonia (VDSL2)
  • Elion launched VDSL2-based business services in 2010. Current packages include 10/5, 20/5, 20/10 and 30/10. From May 1, 2013, VDSL2 is also offered to private customers with speed 30/10. Some users have maximum of 40/10 as of 2016, due to EstWin project. Fiber optic cable is being built around the country and the old rural ADSL DSLAM stations are turned into VDSL2 if possible(within reasonable distance from the telephone exchange).
Finland (VDSL)
  • Provided in Oulu by DNA, in Turku by Sonera, in various cities by Nebula and in Helsinki and Tampere by Sonera. The services provided in Turku and Oulu are actually based on Cisco's LRE, although at least in Oulu the technology has since been changed to VDSL2. A few universities also provide fiber-optic VDSLs to their students.
Finland (VDSL2)
  • Saunalahti was to provide VDSL2 in December 2006 to small area as a pilot project, but was delayed until further notice due to low firmware satisfaction. In 2010 Saunalahti/Elisa provides VDSL2 subscriptions to some specific areas. An example: Elisa product with bundled IPTV services and 100/10 Mbit/s VDSL2 connection.
  • Päijät-Hämeen Puhelin started providing 100/64 Mbit/s VDSL2 subscriptions in 2007 Q1.
  • Nebula started providing VDSL2 pilot subscriptions during June 2007 and is currently offering commercial subscriptions in limited area.
  • Suomi Communication Oy Offers both SHDSL and VDSL2 subscriptions where available.
  • DNA Oy offers symmetric 100/100 Mbit/s VDSL2 connections at least in the Oulu area.
  • TeliaSonera offers VDSL2-based subscriptions in their "Kodin Netti" service, offering rates 1:1 Mbit/s, 10:10 Mbit/s and 100:10 Mbit/s.
  • PPO-Yhtiöt Oy offers VDSL2-based connections at speeds 10/10, 25/10, 50/10.
France (VDSL)
  • Erenis (bought by Neuf-Cegetel, now part of SFR) was offering both internet and telephone over VDSL in Paris using FTTB. The broadband was 60 Mbit/s downstream and 6 Mbit/s upstream.[30] This offer has been discontinued in Q2-2007.
  • The French regulator, so called Arcep, have started the evaluation[31] of VDSL2 technology in FTTC mode since July 2011. It's still unclear if field trials or deployment will start in 2012.
  • As of Q3 2013, the hosting provider and ISP, OVH, provides VDSL access in larger French cities (Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, Lille).[32]
France (VDSL2)
  • Erenis was deploying VDSL1 and VDSL2 (as fiber to the premises) until Neuf Cegetel, later absorbed by SFR, bought the company in April 2007.[33] There was no further VDSL deployment in France because the standard has never been approved by the sole owner of the historical copper local loop (France Télécom). VDSL2 use cases has been evaluated by the DSL tech introduction workgroup.[34] and validated on 26 April 2013.[35] Real test with high amount of real customers has begun on some French zones until the first public offer in 2013 Q4.
  • Orange Since 10/01/2013 offer VDSL2-based connections at speeds up to 100/30 Mbit/s (usually between 15 and 50 Mbit/s down).
  • SFR Since 10/01/2013 offer VDSL2-based connections at speeds up to 100/40 Mbit/s.
  • Bouygues Telecom Since 10/01/2013 offer VDSL2-based connections at speeds up to 100/40 Mbit/s.
  • OVH 10/01/2013 offer VDSL2-based connections at speeds up to 92/36 Mbit/s.
  • Free Since 10/01/2013 offer VDSL2-based connections at speeds up to 100/40 Mbit/s.

    All except OVH offer Quadruple play BOX.

Germany (VDSL2)
  • Deutsche Telekom offers VDSL2 in large parts of over 50 major cities through outdoor DSLAMs and in small parts of over 750 cities and towns through the existing indoor DSLAMs with 25/5 Mbit/s or 50/10 Mbit/s downstream/upstream. The 8.832 MHz profile 8b is deployed with band plan 998-M2x-B, the 17.664 MHz profile 17a with band plan 998ADE17-M2x-B.[36] Deployment started in late 2006 with VDSL2 offered in the 12 largest cities in Germany, by 2007 residents in over 50 cities had access to VDSL2.[37] While VDSL2 was originally only available to customers who purchased the triple play package "Entertain" (starting at €54.95 per month for 25/5 Mbit/s or €59.95 for 50/10 Mbit/s), VDSL2 is now also available to double play customers (starting at €44.95 for 25/5 Mbit/s, with 50/10 Mbit/s available as an option for an additional €5 per month).[38]
  • In August 2014, Deutsche Telekom began offering G.vector based 100/40 Mbit/s service in new VDSL2 deployments.[39] Existing VDSL2 deployments will be upgraded to G.vector in 2016.[40] For its G.vector VDSL2 customer premises equipment, Deutsche Telekom has specified mandatory support for profiles 8b and 17a, with optional support for profile 30a.[36]
  • Vodafone (formerly Arcor) and Telefónica Germany (marketed as O2) provide VDSL2 with up to 50/20 Mbit/s through local-loop unbundling. These alternative providers also utilize G.vector to offer 100/40 Mbit/s service, however G.vector can only be feasibly deployed by one provider per serving area interface. The regulator BNetzA created a "vectoring list", on which providers can claim cabinets on a first-come-first-served basis. This provider is required to offer bit-stream access to its competitors.[41] Local providers offer up to 120/5 rates.
  • 1&1 Internet, Congstar, and easybell offer VDSL2 with up to 50/10 Mbit/s via bit-stream access to the access networks of Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone, and Telefónica Germany.
Gibraltar (VDSL2)
  • Gibtelecom Ltd, has been rolling out VDSL2 as from 2012, offering HSI at 20Mbit/s 8Mbit/s and 4Mbit/s.
Guernsey (VDSL2)
  • Launched VDSL services October 2011. Sure and JT Global on the Bailiwick of Guernsey are now offering VDSL at max 40 Mbit/s download and max 5 Mbit/s upload speeds, up from the existing 20 Mbit/s / 800 kbit/s ADSL2 service. This is available to customers within 2 km of the exchange.
Greece (VDSL2)
  • CYTA Hellas, a subsidiary of CYTA, started offering VDSL2 services in Attica in mid-December 2011 and expanded to Thessaloniki and other major Greek cities in 2012.[42][43]
  • OTE has been investing in VDSL2 as a transitional technology until FTTH hits the market.[44] It started testing VDSL2 in 2008 and began gradual deployment of the service by Q4, 2012. Since mid-2013 OTE has been offering its VDSL2 services to an ever increasing number of areas in the major metropolitan centres of Greece.
  • Most major ISPs in the country offer VDSL2 services using OTE's access network (FTTC), through the OTE Wholesale division.
Greenland (VDSL2)
  • Tele Greenland is running VDSL2 on Ericsson DSLAMs as a part of FTTN, since 2009.
Hungary (VDSL)
  • Starting in October 2008 the largest Hungarian incumbent offers 25 Mbit/s subscriptions to approximately 100,000 households after upgrading part of their network to VDSL.[45]
Hungary (VDSL2)
  • T-Home is providing VDSL2 in select areas at 30mbit download speed and 5mbit upload speed.
Iceland (VDSL)
  • Provided in Akureyri/North East by Tengir.
  • The telecom company Síminn is now implementing VDSL to much of the capital of Reykjavík, starting in 2010. The service is known as Ljósnet[46] and most of the connections available with this service are VDSL2 but some users are apparently being offered GPONsame marketing name.
  • Vortex sells VDSL.
Iceland (VDSL2)
  • TSC has been running VDSL on TUT DSLAM since 2002 and is now running VDSL2 on SINO Telcom DSLAM.
  • TSC is believed to be the first company to run VDSL on public telephone lines.
  • Síminn is running VDSL2 on Alcatel-Lucent DSLAM as a part of FTTC.
Ireland (VDSL2)
  • eircom Wholesale launched its FTTC (fibre to the cabinet) VDSL2 network with initial speeds of 70 Mbit/s download and 20 Mbit/s upload on the 20th May 2013.[47] The network and all customer modems being supplied support vectoring technology which will allow higher speeds when it is enabled at some stage in the future. The eircom Wholesale FTTC network is available to all Irish telecommunications providers, including eircom's own retail division on a neutral basis. These companies can use the wholesale network to provide FTTC products to their customers under their own brands with their own billing systems and core national and international networks. The VDSL2 product is available either with or without a POTS dial tone from the local exchange. Where customers opt to retain a dial tone they can continue to use traditional telephone services from their preferred provider alongside their VDSL2 or, where they opt for only a VDSL2 connection, they can provide voice services using VoIP. Most providers supply an access gateway device that contains a VDSL2 modem, router, WiFi hub and two VoIP ports for telephone service (even if these are not enabled).
  • eircom has a fibre to the cabinet offering called eFibre, which since the launch of vectoring in February 2014 offers up to 100 Mibts/sec down, 20 Mbit/s up to the customer.[48] at prices ranging from EUR 30.00 to EUR45.00 for residential customers. The price includes voice telephone services. Details of wholesale offering, available to other telecommunications carriers[49]
Isle of Man (VDSL2)
  • Launched VDSL services October 2011. Sure:Cable and Wireless and Manx Telecom on the Isle of Man are now offering VDSL at max 80 Mb download and max 10 Mb upload speeds, up from the current 16 Mb/800 kb ADSL2 service. This is available to customers within 2 km of the exchange and will also be available to customers of the other Isle of Man-based broadband suppliers such as WiManx.
Italy (VDSL2)
  • On 5 March 2013, Fastweb launched its service based on VDSL2 (SLU) with which customers will benefit from speed of 100 Mbit/s download and 10 Mbit/s upload. Fastweb has announced a new plan to expand the network to ultra-wideband will be completed at the end of 2016, to reach about 7.5 million households and businesses (or 30% of the population).
  • Since August 2014, Vodafone began providing technology-profile 100/20 Mbit/s in several Italian cities (SLU). The strategic plan Spring Vodafone provides coverage of 150 major Italian cities with its own fiber optic network (FTTC or FTTH depending on location), with the aim to achieve by the end of 2016 25% of the Italian population, or more than 7 million Italian households and businesses.
  • From December 2015 Tiscali offers VDSL2 profile 100/20 Mbit/s in more than 120 Italian cities (wholesale Telecom Italia), the coverage will be gradually extended over the months.
  • From December 2015 Telecom Italia started offering "TIM SMART FIBRA" at 100 Mbit/s in download and 20 Mbit/s in upload via FTTC (VDSL2 17a). In the city of Milan the population can get 300 Mbit/s in download and 20 Mbit/s in upload using FTTH.
  • According to the strategic plan 2015-2017 of Telecom Italia, by the end of 2017, 75% of the Italian population it should be reached by the optical fiber (FTTC or FTTH architecture depending on location).
Luxembourg (VDSL2)
  • Post Luxembourg has offered a 30 Mbit/s down, 10 Mbit/s up VDSL2 service since 2011. As of mid-2014, offerings also include 100 Mbit/s down, 50 Mbit/s up over bonded VDSL2, and faster services using FTTK or FTTP.[50] Alternative providers, including Luxembourg Online, Orange and Tango offer similar products.
Malta (VDSL)
  • VDSL is deployed in Malta by GO at speeds of up to 35  Mbit/s downstream and 2  Mbit/s upstream.[51][52]
Monaco (VDSL2)
  • VDSL2, at a 30 Mbit/s downstream / 2 Mbit/s upstream rate, is offered to residential clients of Monaco Telecom, the incumbent monopoly operator for fixed lines, television and internet provision. In February 2011, this internet service cost €35 per month, and use of the provided Monaco Telecom "MT Box", a rebranded Thomson TG789vn or TG789vn v3 modem since 2013, was obligatory.
  • Since mid 2014 the maximum speeds reachable is 65 Mbit/s downstream / 8 Mbit/s upstream.
Netherlands (VDSL)
  • VDSL(2) is offered by KPN. KPN hardly invested in ADSL2+ in 2006, despite the current coverage of only 57% (2007), because they saw a better future in VDSL. In 2014 KPN started offering vectoring for new customers and speeds up to 80 Mbit/s down and 8 Mbit/s up are reported.
  • VDSL is rolled out by Tele2 in 25 different cities on September 1, 2009.
Netherlands (VDSL2)
  • KPN has been offering a FttC VDSL2 service since 2009 and VDSL-CO ("Central Office") since 2010. KPN will offer VDSL-BR ("Buiten Ring", Outer Ring) starting from Q2 2011. KPN is offering VDSL both retail and wholesale. In 2014 KPN start offering vectoring for new customers with speeds up to 80 Mbit/s down and 8 Mbit/s up are reported.
  • KPN subsidiaries XS4All and Telfort also offer VDSL2 to their customers.
  • Tele2 started offering VDSL2 under the FiberSpeed name in 2009.
  • BBned, now a Tele2 subsidiary, started offering VDSL2 in 2010.
Norway (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 was first announced by NextGenTel at the start of 2009, and is now also offered by Tafjord Marked (Mimer) in Ålesund, PowerTech Information Systems in Tønsberg and Oslo and Drangedal Everk (DEAN) in Drangedal. Telenor started offering VDSL subscriptions on Feb 1 2011. Speeds are 25/5, 30/10 and 40/10. NextGenTel has different speeds (30/5 and 40/20) and Powertech has only one tier of 50/20.
Norway (VDSL2)
  • NextGenTel offers VDSL2 nationwide.[53]
  • Broadnet and Homenet offers VDSL2 nationwide.
  • Telenor offers VDSL2 nationwide.[54]
  • Netpower provide VDSL2 in the cities Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, and Sandnes.
  • Noraxess provides VDSL2 in cities around Helgeland. With speeds up to 50/20 Mbit/s.
  • PowerTech provides VDSL2 in Oslo and Akershus.
  • StayOn provides VDSL2 and VDSL2 bonding in Møre og Romsdal.
Poland (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is offered by Orange Polska in two download speed tiers of 40 Mbit/s and 80 Mbit/s. The highest tier cost is $31 or €24 per month with 2-year contract.
Poland (VDSL2)
  • Orange Polska provides VDSL2 with speeds up to 80/8 Mbit since July, 2011.
  • Netia provides VDSL2 at 50/5 Mbit/s since December, 2010.
Portugal (VDSL2)
  • Clix (ISP) and Portugal Telecom are planning to provide VDSL2 + FTTH in the end of 2008, new technology of PTInovação (PT Labs) called uMSAN48v can provide up to 100 Mbit/s.
Romania (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is offered in urban areas by Romtelecom at speeds of 30 Mbit/s up to 100 Mbit/s for €10.54 per month with unlimited traffic and includes phone line.
Romania (VDSL2)
  • Telekom Romania are now offering VDSL2 at maximum 100 Mbit/s download and 32 Mbit/s upload from the beginning of 2011 in 50 cities.
Russia (VDSL)
  • VDSL appeared on 8 February 2005. It is provided by SCTS, offers Internet speeds ranging from 4:1.5 Mbit/s to 12:6 Mbit/s at Saratov city. Connection costs around €7-50 per month (including 125–1024 MB of external incoming traffic). Traffic costs around €0.03-0.05 per megabyte.
Serbia (VDSL2)
  • VDSL2 is provided to customers of the largest telecommunication operator Telekom Srbija, since February 1. 2013, for a 2-year subscription plan or monthly payments for personal use. As of March 2015 it offers speeds of 50Mbit/s and up to 100 Mbit/s, flat rate with the same 2Mbit/s upload speed.[55] Prices ranges from €24 to €37.5 for unmetered internet service (not including fixed phone line monthly costs). Fixed IPv4 address increases monthly price of the Internet package.[56] Bigger upload speeds are sold separately with 'Upload booster' service, up to 10 Mbit/s of upload for 30Mbit and 50Mbit download and up to 15 Mbit/s of upload for 100Mbit/s download.[57] Internet packages are available if Telephone line is already present, but 2 year telephone line subscription contract is available for free (1 RSD), for a new line.[58] Offers for business users are for 2 year and 1-year subscription plan. Prices for business users are higher, from €30 for 50Mbit/s (2 year subscription plan), up to €44 for 100Mbit/s download, flat rate (1 year subscription plan)[59] and require one-time payment for fixed IPv4 address.[60]
Slovakia (VDSL2)
  • Slovak Telekom provides VDSL2 to customers since September, 2013. Speeds are available up to 80/8 Mbit/s, 2016. VDSL2 vectoring is planned.[61]
Slovenia (VDSL)
  • VDSL appeared on 1 October 2005. It is provided by T-2, offering triple play services with Internet speeds ranging from 1 Mbit/s:256 kbit/s (€16) to 60:25 Mbit/s (€73) at more than 120 locations across the country (75% coverage). A 40:15 Mbit/s connection costs €63 per month.
Slovenia (VDSL2)
  • AMIS is providing VDSL2 to corporate customers since 2013.
  • TušTelekom is providing VDSL2 to enterprises.
  • Telekom Slovenije is providing VDSL2 since March 5, 2007 to its customers.
  • T-2 is providing VDSL2 to customers since May 2007 and it offers speeds up to 60/25 Mbit/s on copper phone lines.
Spain (VDSL)
  • VDSL roll-out by Telefonica began in 2005 in selected places in Madrid. Commercial launch up started in September 2009 (combined with free national telephone calls and TV-over-IP service)[62] and December 2009 (combined with free national calls).[63]
Spain (VDSL2)
  • Movistar tested the deployment of VDSL2 and they were planning to provide VDSL2 in 2007 or 2008 start, but its commercial deployment was delayed until 2009.[64] Their VDSL2 offer consists of a 30Mbit/s access with an upload capacity of 1Mbit/s.
  • Jazztel Introduced VDSL2 in April 2010.[65] Currently it has finished the deployment of the technology on its network and is offering 30 Mbit/s over VDSL2 with an upstream rate of 3.5 Mbit/s.[66]
Sweden (VDSL2)
  • Telenor and Telia are negotiating a joint venture to deploy the VDSL2 infrastructure at a cost of 10 billion Swedish kronor.[67]
  • Bredbandsbolaget started conducting VDSL2 tests October 2005, Bredbandsbolaget is now a part of Telenor.[68]
  • On March 13, 2008 TeliaSonera announced it would start deploying VDSL2.[69] Telia are talking about 30 to 70 Mbit/s in downstream.
  • On March 18, 2008, Bredbandsbolaget announced it would start deploying VDSL2 on March 25, 2008.[70] BBB is now offering VDSL2 at 60:20 Mbit/s for customers closer than 800 meters to the telephone station and 40/10 for customers who have between 800 and 1500 meters.
Switzerland (VDSL)
  • Used in the Swisscom TV (former: Bluewin TV)[71] television-over-IP service and in the DSL service with up to 50 Mbit/s downstream and 5 Mbit/s upstream, introduced with lower bitrates in November 2006. The city of Zurich had a vote about putting Fibre (and not VDSL) infrastructure in place in 2007 which was approved by the voters. This "Fiber to the Home" network will be run by the city's power company and will offer maximum speeds of around 100 Mbit bandwidth though it's not clear what the upload speeds or pricing will be. The Swiss telecom giant Swisscom offers VDSL2 in most of Switzerland and is currently migrating the ADSL-lines to VDSL2.
Switzerland (VDSL2)
  • Swisscom is deploying VDSL2 and it is now available to customers since July 1, 2007. Since December 2006 it is in use for IPTV.
Turkey (VDSL)
  • Turk Telekom offers VDSL2 services for resale by Turkish ISPs as of July 1, 2008 across 73 of Turkey's 81 provinces. Packages ranging from 20 Mbit/s download/1 Mbit/s upload to 100 Mbit/s download/4 Mbit/s upload speeds are available. 20 Mbit/s will sell for approximately $20, while 100 Mbit/s will sell for $66.[72] Turkish ISP's that will offer the service include TTNET,[73][74] Tellcom,[75] Biri,[76] and Smile.[77]
Turkey (VDSL2)
  • TTNet provides VDSL2 service in 20 Mbit/s, 35 Mbit/s, 50 Mbit/s and 100 Mbit/s.
  • Millenicom Türkiye[78] (Doping Internet)[79] provides VDSL2 service in 24 Mbit/s, 35 Mbit/s, 50 Mbit/s and 100 Mbit/s.
  • Turkcell Superonline provides VDSL2 service in 24 Mbit/s.
United Kingdom (VDSL)

British Telecom and resellers:

  • Openreach, the Access Network delivery arm of BT Group conducted successful trials of VDSL using FTTC technology in the Muswell Hill area of North London. Following this trial national rollout commenced under the banner of NGA (Next Generation Access) starting with selected exchange areas around the UK. The product initially offered downstream bit rates of up to 40 Mbit/s and upstream of up to 10 Mbit/s dependent on the distance between the new DSLAM street-cabinet and the end user's premises, and by late 2012, this had increased to downstream bit rates of up to nearly 80 Mbit/s and upstream of up to 20 Mbit/s.[80] Alongside this Openreach are conducting additional trials into the deployment of FTTP (Fibre to the Premises) which although more expensive and complex to implement, can provide downstream rates of up to 110 Mbit/s and is thought to be more future proofed than FTTC. Recently this has been improved to 330 Mbit/s downstream and 30 Mbit/s upstream. Original projections indicated that FTTC was significantly cheaper to implement than FTTP; however, current thinking is that the cost difference between the two technologies may be smaller than first envisaged.
  • As of 2011, the Openreach product is also resold by other ISPs.

Other providers:

  • A number of smaller regional ISPs also exist and sell VDSL based services.
  • For example, Rutland telecom currently offer VDSL technology in some parts of the UK, mainly focused around the county of Rutland. Rutland telecom was the first ISP to offer VDSL services in the UK.[81] Also ask4 Ltd, Ripwire & DRBSY LTD[82] announced the availability of up to 40 Mbit/s VDSL services for business users and consumers across South Yorkshire which utilises the infrastructure being rolled out by the four main councils in the area; Sheffield, Rotherham, Doncaster and Barnsley (collectively known as Digital Region Ltd),[83] an EU government backed project. The network offers up to 40 Mbit/s downstream and up to 10 Mbit/s upstream with an assured level of service. The infrastructure consists of FTTC (Fibre to the Cabinet) with sub loop unbundling to provide the last mile connection to the consumer via existing copper.
United Kingdom (VDSL2)
  • BT Group trialled VDSL2 in the Muswell Hill, London and Whitchurch, Cardiff Exchanges starting in July 2009. On 23 March 2009, they announced plans to deploy the service to 29 exchanges throughout England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.[84] On 9 July 2009, they announced plans to deploy the service to a further 69 exchanges throughout the UK by the summer of 2010.[85]

May 2010 BT announced £2.5 billion plans to roll out a mixture of VDSL2 FTTC (75%) and GPON FTTP (25%) to 66% of the UK by 2015 with VDSL2 speeds starting at 40 Mbit/s down 10 Mbit/s up potentially rising to 60 Mbit/s down 15 Mbit/s up.[86] In October 2011, BT announced that this roll-out was being accelerated such that it will be completed by 2014 (one year earlier than originally planned).[87] April 2012 BT to introduce new product download speeds of up to 80Mbit/s down and 20Mbit/s up on its VDSL2 network. This has been achieved by increasing ANFP spectrum usage to 17 MHz. BT announce FTTP On Demand — a GPON based service to extend the fibre overlay in FTTC areas direct to the home to subscribers willing to pay (install costs not yet announced expected to be in high hundreds of pounds).

  • On 8 October 2009, it was revealed that Virgin Media will trial VDSL2. Residents of Higher Pill, in Saltash, and nearby Hatt will be offered free broadband via a VDSL2 line to a roadside cabinet. The cabinets will be linked to Virgin Media backhaul via new fibre laid by Vtesse Networks through BT's local exchange, 5 km away.[88]

The trial eventually resulted in Vtesse networks running the final service without Virgin Media's involvement under their own brand on 1 October 2010.

  • Digital Region Ltd, an EU government-backed project formed by the four main councils in South Yorkshire – Sheffield, Rotherham, Doncaster and Barnsley, along with the Regional Development Agency, Yorkshire Forward, have rolled out VDSL2 services to over 80% of the county. The network was shut down in August 2014 having never passed 5,000 subscribers. The street furniture was disconnected from the power circuits (it piggybacked off streetlighting) in September through November.
  • LittleBigOne also joined the network in 2011, offering 40Mbit/s VDSL services, including the first UK IPTV over VDSL service, which launched in early 2012. They will also be offering an "up to 100Mbit" service starting in May 2012.
  • On 14 April 2010, Rutland Telecom announced that it is to deliver broadband speeds up to 40 Mbit/s using a fibre to the cabinet solution in the Welsh notspot village of Erbistock. The initiative, backed by private investment, will be the first time that VDSL2 technology has been used in a Welsh rural village.[89]

North America

Canada (VDSL)
Canada (VDSL2)
  • SaskTel, a crown corporation of the province of Saskatchewan, has officially announced the deployment of VDSL2. SaskTel is using VDSL2 to increase the amount of bandwidth to its customers, allowing more HDTV streams with its MAX Entertainment Service. The extra bandwidth also allows SaskTel to offer their "Ultra" service providing 25 Mbit/s download and 2 Mbit/s upload to non-IPTV customers.
  • Bell Canada is currently offering VDSL2 in some areas of Ontario and Quebec with speeds reaching 50 Mbit/s download and 10 Mbit/s upload, marketed as Bell Fibe Internet, or part of the Bell Fibe TV package. For Fibe TV distance from cabinet to receiver must be equal to or less than 900 meters. Bell originally deployed Lucent Stinger remote SLAMs which did not conform to ITU G.993.2 spec and as a result is not compatible with standard VDSL2 modems and requires a custom firmware from modem vendors. Bell has recently started to deploy Alcatel-Lucent 7330 remote SLAMs which do conform to ITU G.993.2 spec and customers served on those are able to use standard VDSL2 modems.
  • TELUS is offering VDSL2 in a large percentage of its footprint in British Columbia, Alberta and parts of Québec with speeds reaching 25 Mbit/s download and 5 Mbit/s upload, marked as TELUS High Speed Turbo 25 (on the 8b profile), or part of a TELUS Optik TV package. The 17A profile is now being deployed everywhere with a 50Mbit/s download and 10Mbit/s maximum upload. If the residence does not qualify for the 17A profile then they are also deploying a pair bonding solution if the address has two available cable pairs using the Actiontec V2000H router. Both services (pair bonding and single pair) are marketed as High Speed 50 or Optik 50.[91][92] TELUS is the third company in the world to deploy a commercial VDSL2 Bonding solution and to offer speeds up to 50 Mbit/s.
  • Lightspeed Communications is offering VDSL2 in a large percentage of its footprint in British Columbia and Alberta with speeds reaching 100 Mbit/s download and 20 Mbit/s upload, where supported.[93]
  • MTS, Manitoba Telephone Services operating in the province of Manitoba, Offers VDSL2 in multiple communities. Company claims "65 per cent of Manitoba households will have access to very high-speed Internet delivered by FTTH or VDSL technology."[94]
Mexico (VDSL2)
  • As of February 2012, Telmex has announced plans to partner with Alcatel-Lucent to deploy VDSL2 in multiple cities and ultimately serve millions of customers.[95]
United States (VDSL)
  • CenturyLink provides Internet access over FTTN VDSL in Denver, Colorado; Salt Lake City, Utah; Boise, Idaho; Phoenix, Arizona; Seattle, Washington; Omaha, Nebraska; Minneapolis; Des Moines, Iowa; Fayetteville, North Carolina and some surrounding areas of these cities. In Seattle, Denver, and Minneapolis areas, CenturyLink's rate structure extends up to 40 Mbit/s downstream and 20 Mbit/s upstream, for around $80 per month (December 2011). In Boise, CenturyLink offers 40, 20, or 12 Mbit/s downstream and 5 Mbit/s upstream over VDSL. Other locations are known to support up to 20 Mbit/s downstream.
  • AT&T provides Internet access and television service over VDSL in several regions under the trade-name U-verse. The AT&T service is based on FTTN; FTTP is also used.
  • Verizon offers its FiOS service in some metropolitan areas at speed of up to 300 Mbit/s. The Verizon service is based on FTTP, and normally CAT5e Ethernet (or MoCA ) is used to deliver data service throughout the home. However, VDSL is used in MDUs when running CAT5e or coax to individual units is not practical.
  • LocalTel Communications of Wenatchee, WA offers a single VDSL line to an apartment complex next to their Network Operations Center. Offering 100 Mbit/s Down and 100 Mbit/s up.
  • Frontier Communications now offers Bonded ADSL and VDSL service with speeds of up to 40 Mbit/s downstream and 10 Mbit/s upstream in all of its major services areas like Fort Wayne, IN, Rochester, NY, New Haven, CT, and Bloomington, IL, suburbs of Minneapolis, MN as well as more rural markets.
United States (VDSL2)
  • AT&T has deployed Alcatel-Lucent VDSL2 equipment (video-ready access devices) in street cabinets as a part of its U-verse service in fiber to the node (FTTN) based service. U-verse was originally used a fiber to the curb (FTTC) setup but has later on downgraded to a FTTN setup and that FTTN will continue to be used. iNIDs or the Motorola NVG 589 gateway are used in a pair-bonding setup to extend the reach of their FTTN configuration.
  • CenturyLink — formerly Qwest, Embarq, and CenturyTel — is currently expanding its VDSL2 network. It currently offers the technology in the Denver, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, Omaha, Phoenix, Flagstaff, Seattle, Boise, Albuquerque and Farmington, NM, St George/Salt Lake City, UT, Portland, OR, Fargo, ND, St. Paul/Minneapolis and the Wake Forest, NC (VDSL2 8A) areas. Some areas currently have VDSL2 service up to 80 Mbit/s downstream and 40 Mbit/s upstream. They are also currently rolling out VDSL2 equipment along with MPEG-4 TV service to Columbia, MO, Winter Park, FL, Wake Forest, NC and Las Vegas, NV for its Prism IPTV service. They are upgrading their existing service in La Crosse, WI in 2010.
  • BellSouth had planned to roll out VDSL2 to its customers prior to its acquisition by AT&T. Many of those markets have since been included in the U-verse rollout.
  • Sonic.net is in the process of upgrading some customers in San Francisco to VDSL2.[96]
  • Frontier Communications currently offers VDSL2 service in a number of areas it services. In some locations, VDSL2 service is available only to business subscribers, and customers might be required to change their residential account to a business account in order to receive VDSL2 service on their line.
  • North State Communications has recently started offering VDSL2 service in select areas.
  • Price County Telephone Company has recently started offering VDSL2 service in select areas.

Oceania

Australia (VDSL)
Australia (VDSL2)
  • EFTel commenced a rollout of VDSL2-compatible MSAN (Multi-Service Access Node) technology to exchanges across Australia as part of its BroadbandNext network. As of September 2008, EFTel has successfully installed MSANs in 55 exchanges in readiness for the ratification of VDSL2 in Australia.[97]
  • iiNet began trialling VDSL in Perth in December 2008 offering 100 Mbit/50 Mbit speeds.[98]
  • As of December 2008, iiNet was trialling VDSL2 in a FTTB (Fibre To The Building) deployment to residential apartment blocks, with a view to further deployments in 2009.
  • Private network deployment of VDSL2 has been occurring since 2007 in apartment blocks using [Zyxel]- and [Huawei]-based products across Australia.
  • In 2009, TransACT commenced greenfield roll-out for MDU and upgrade of TransACT's existing VDSL access network to VDSL2, utilising Ericsson EDAs. (as of 2014 also using the Huawei MA5616)
  • In 2010, Adam Internet deployed a VDSL2 network available to residents at The Precinct.
  • In 2010, Apex Telecom (Defunct) commenced a greenfield roll-out for MDUs and gated communities.
  • In 2013 TPG Telecom announced its intention to build an FTTB network covering around 500,000 premises.[99]
  • In 2014, the Australian Government mandated that the National Broadband Network (NBNCo) should include Vectored VDSL2 as part of the Multi-Technology Mix (in addition to GPON, Fixed Wireless, Satellite and HFC). NBNCo began FTTB and FTTN trials in 2014 with commercial services officially launched in September 2015.
  • In 2015/2015, [MIX Technology Ventures] (ACT, NSW, VIC) and [Real World Networks] (National) separately started deploying VDSL2 in FTTB and FTTdp Models in an Open Wholesale model.
New Zealand (VDSL)
  • VDSL2 is widely available in towns and cities throughout New Zealand that have been cabinetised as part of Chorus' NGN (Next Generation Network) rollout. Available profiles are 8B (50 Mbit/s) and 17A (100 Mbit/s); which profile is deployed is determined automatically by a process called Dynamic Line Management and may change due to changes in the stability or noise levels on the line.[100] All plans are upload speed limited to 10 Mbit/s.
  • VDSL2 was made available to some business customers of Vodafone New Zealand utilising the network assets of TelstraClear[101] (which Vodafone acquired in 2012). Vodafone went on to make VDSL available all customers on January 23, 2014.[102]
New Zealand (VDSL2)
  • TelstraClear (now Vodafone NZ) has begun offering VDSL2 through 140 cabinets on its own Next IP Network in seven city centres. The VDSL2 service is currently available in business districts of Wellington, Hamilton, Tauranga, Napier, Wanganui, New Plymouth, Lower Hutt, and parts of Auckland, offering download speeds up to 30 Mbit/s and upload speeds up to 7 Mbit/s. TelstraClear plans to expand coverage by Christmas 2008 to Dunedin, Palmerston North, Christchurch, Auckland, North Shore, Manukau and Waitakere.
  • Orcon signed a NZ$30 million deal with Siemens to roll out VDSL2 in 2008. Orcon's network will cover Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington, Hastings, Napier, Tauranga, Hamilton, Dunedin, Nelson and New Plymouth with "packages of broadband, video services, internet television and a phone line for $50 to $60 a month.".[103] As of January 2014, they offer ADSL2+, FTIH and VDSL2.
  • Telecom NZ and Vodafone NZ were also testing VDSL2, but were waiting for an agreement on ways to handle interference before deploying it alongside other equipment in Telecom exchanges.
  • Vodafone NZ announced in May 2008 that VDSL2 will be offered in the Auckland area, with availability taking place as each exchange was unbundled. Full Auckland coverage was expected by the end of 2008,[104] but was not launched until January 2014[105]
  • The wholesale division of Telecom NZ has commenced laboratory testing of VDSL2 technology. If successful VDSL2 is likely to augment its current ADSL2+ capabilities over time, especially where unbundled loop lengths are short enough (approx 1 km) to benefit from the increased speeds.[106]
  • On 30 January 2009 Telecom NZ announced its roll out of VDSL2 coverage.[107] The rollout commenced in September 2010.
  • SNAP! launched their VDSL plans on 9 July 2013.[108]
  • Telecom NZ announced retail VDSL plans on 13 July 2013.[109]
  • As of 25 November 2015 VDSL speeds are 30Mbit/s - 100Mbit/s downstream and 5Mbit/s - 50Mbit/s Upstream.

South America

Argentina (VDSL)
  • Since mid-2009, Iplan networks NSS started providing FTTN VDSL home connections in the city of Buenos Aires and main areas of La Plata, Quilmes, Lomas de Zamora, Córdoba, Rosario and Mar del Plata. The home service is available through their "Internet Optimo" plan which goes from 2 MB up to 10 MB (80 Mbit/s), providing the same download and upload speed (starting at ARS162 -US$40.50- for 2 Mbit/s).[110]
Argentina (VDSL2)
  • IPLAN Telecomunicaciones is beginning to deploy Allied Telesis VDSL2 equipment to replace old LRE Cisco equipment among their 10K customers in Buenos Aires.
  • Telecom Argentina is offering VDSL 2 over ZyXEL VMG 1312 modems in the City of Buenos Aires in October 2015 and offering 20 MBit/Sec with unlimited local telephone calls for ARS 410 (USD 43) per month.
Brazil (VDSL)
  • GVT is providing a VDSL network, that reaches speeds up to 50 Mbit/s and 5 Mbit/s upload in their service plans. The company uses equipment of Keymile corp. and Zhone Technologies, Inc.
  • TIM is providing a VDSL network, that reaches speeds up to 90 Mbit/s and 30 Mbit/s upload in their service plans.
Brazil (VDSL2)

In Caxias do Sul, residential service package speeds vary from: download 5 Mbit/s to 100 Mbit/s and upload from 0.75 Mbit/s to 10Mbit/s[112]

  • Sercomtel has deployed a new VDSL2+ network on Londrina city. Reaches speed up to 30Mbit/s on downstream, and 15Mbit/s upstream.
  • On 13 July 2012, TIM has announced their VDSL2 service in some locations from São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, known as "Live TIM". In the announcement, a package with 25Mbit/s on downstream (5Mbit/s on upstream) would be available,[113] but as of 2015, four different packages were available, varying from 35Mbit/s to 90Mbit/s on downstream (20Mbit/s to 30Mbit/s on upstream). In May 2014, TIM also announced a new package called "Live TIM Extreme" which uses FTTH technology to offer 1Gbit/s on downstream (500Mbit/s on upstream) and became, at that time, the fastest broadband connection available to the public in the country.[114]
Chile (VDSL)
  • As of November 2014, Movistar is providing a VDSL network in areas of Santiago, the capital city, with speeds up to 40 Mbit/s down and 5 Mbit/s up.
Chile (VDSL2)
  • Movistar is beginning to deploy Huawei VDSL2 equipment to some sectors in the city of Santiago.
Colombia (VDSL2)

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