- Community Fibre posted a 48% revenue increase to £113 million and a 530% rise in EBITDA to £49.8 million, while customer take-up improved and it has been EBITDA-positive since April 2024.
- Despite encouraging financials and nearly 430,000 homes served, significant challenges persist including high build costs, market consolidation and net losses across the broader altnet sector.
What happened: community Fibre reported strong revenue and EBITDA growth as it continued to add customers across London
Community Fibre, the private equity-backed full-fibre broadband provider focused on London, has reported strong headline figures for its most recent financial year. The company grew revenue by 48% to £113 million and EBITDA by 530% to £49.8 million, and announced that it has been EBITDA-positive since April 2024, with expectations of becoming cash-flow-positive before financing costs in the first half of this year.
The operator also highlighted improvements in operational efficiency, with opex falling by 12% year-on-year, and steady growth in its customer base. Community Fibre now serves 429,000 homes and businesses, up 26% from the end of 2024, and its take-up rate, a key metric for altnets, rose seven percentage points to 32%.
These figures come against a backdrop of rapid adoption of full-fibre broadband in the UK, where such connections have recently overtaken older technologies like FTTC in terms of total connections.
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Why it’s important
While Community Fibre’s growth metrics are commendable, they mask wider structural challenges in the UK fibre altnet market. Build costs remain high, and many regional networks are struggling to turn a profit or cover ongoing investment demands. Analyst data shows overall net losses in the sector increased to £1.5 billion in 2024, indicating systemic financial strain despite isolated successes like Community Fibre’s EBITDA positivity.
This tension reflects a broader trend of market consolidation: some smaller players have been sold off or exited, while larger altnets seek partnerships and mergers to sustain scale. Tens of millions of UK premises are still waiting for full-fibre rollout, and Ofcom data suggests that while planned coverage is improving, some firms are revising deployment expectations downwards.
Community Fibre’s story underscores the dual nature of the UK broadband transformation: strong consumer demand and accelerating adoption on one hand, and a commercially challenging environment on the other. For investors and policymakers alike, the question remains whether positive EBITDA and customer growth can outpace the structural costs and competitive pressures inherent in rolling out next-generation networks.
