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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Business
Sam Barker

Broadband providers can charge you £110 for missing an appointment - full list of fees

Broadband customers can be charged up to £110 for missing an engineer appointment - with the fees dubbed a "doorbell tax" by annoyed Brits hit by them.

The little-known charges come when a household has asked for an engineer to visit but does not answer the door.

You can also get compensation if an engineer misses an appointment - but this is often a fraction of what you'd pay for missing one yourself.

This is how much the biggest broadband providers will charge you if an engineer is called out to no avail:

  • TalkTalk - up to £65
  • Sky - £25
  • Vodafone - £110
  • Virgin - £25

These firms have been approached for comment.

A Vodafone spokesperson said the firm reserved the right to charge these fees, but was not currently doing so.

The spokesperson said: "Although we reserve the right to charge customers if they miss an engineer appointment, Vodafone does not currently charge. We continuously review our policies to help our customers avoid missed appointments."

A Virgin Media spokesperson said: "Unlike many other providers, all our customers benefit from service and repairs at no extra cost – even if we need to send out an engineer. Charges for missed appointments are common across the industry to ensure we best serve all customers and we’re proud that our charges are amongst the lowest in the market.”

Virgin Media customer Emma Robinson, 42, from Surrey, hit out at the doorbell tax to The Sunday Mirror.

She said: “I have two young children and it’s not unusual for me to fail to hear the doorbell ring if I am upstairs giving my baby a bath.

“Now Virgin want to fine me for not answering my door when they rarely pick up the phone themselves and offer some of the worst customer service on the market. Unbelievable.”

Martyn James, of complaints handling group, resolver.co.uk, said: “Anyone who has spent ages trying to get an appointment for a fault – or has waited at home till the evening with no knock on the door – will be outraged that a missed appointment could result in a charge.

“The broadband industry has a pretty terrible reputation for missed appointments, service and sorting complaints. Until the sector has its house in order, it shouldn’t be charging extra for anything – including missed appointments and exit fees.”

Households can also get compensation if they have booked an engineer who fails to turn up.

This is £26.24 if an engineer either does not arrive or cancels an appointment with less than 24 hours' notice.

The compensation is set by regulator Ofcom.

You should not need to do anything to get the money, as providers are meant to pay the cash out automatically.

Broadband firms only pay out if they are signed up to this Ofcom compensation scheme - but the good news is most of them are.

The list of providers signed up is BT, EE, Hyperoptic, Plusnet, Sky, TalkTalk, Utility Warehouse, Virgin Media, Vodafone and Zen Internet.

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