Gigabit broadband remains top priority for UK councils as digital inclusion gains focus

16 February 2026

Consultancy firm FarrPoint has published its fourth annual survey of digital leaders at councils across England, Scotland and Wales, revealing that expanding the coverage of gigabit broadband remains the top priority for most local authorities, just as it was last year.

The report, UK Local Government Connectivity Survey 2026, found that most respondents chose gigabit broadband (1000Mbps+) as their number one priority, whilst getting 100% of their area covered by at least "superfast" (30Mbps+) connectivity continues to feature as the second-highest priority for councils, followed by the expansion of 4G mobile coverage. On the flip side, ensuring digital connectivity is aligned with net-zero targets has disappeared off this year's list of priorities. Project Gigabit aims to help extend gigabit broadband ISP networks to "nationwide" coverage (c.99% of UK premises) by 2032, focusing mostly on the final 10% to 20% in hard-to-reach areas. Some 89.6% of premises can already access such a network, with Ofcom forecasting between 91% and 97% by January 2028.

The overwhelming majority of local authority respondents (80%) reported that digital connectivity remains a top priority within their region, with only 5% reporting that they felt connectivity was established enough that there was little left to do. However, it should be noted that none of the respondents thought the rollout of digital infrastructure was fully complete and 15% reported a lack of understanding of the scale of the remaining issues. In addition, over 85% of surveyed local authorities now have a digital champion, which is up from 76% last year. However, not all such roles are dedicated ones.

Alongside the usual challenges with digital infrastructure coverage, the report also revealed that nine in 10 councils have not yet been able to measure the economic or social impact of improved connectivity. Whilst 70% of councils would like to undertake formal impact assessments, many are said to "lack the internal capacity and usable frameworks needed to do so". Admittedly, assessing the economic impact of faster broadband and better mobile is notoriously difficult, not least since most premises won't be starting from a point of zero connectivity.

Unfortunately, it continues to be the case that most local authorities identified lack of funding from central government as being one of the main barriers to improving digital connectivity, which was followed by challenges with local infrastructure deployments. In recent years the UK government has tended to centralise control of funding for major mobile and broadband infrastructure projects.

Elsewhere, some barriers to better digital inclusion remain. Councils identified low digital skills and confidence (31%), affordability (26%) and lack of access to devices (19%) as the biggest challenges to unlocking connectivity benefits. These findings underline that simply building infrastructure does not guarantee progress without parallel investment in capability and uptake.

Three quarters of respondents also flagged growing concerns around network resilience, particularly in the wake of weather-related outages. However, many were uncertain over where responsibility lies for telecoms infrastructure recovery and contingency planning.

Data centre development remains another relatively low priority for most councils, despite the sector's recent designation as Critical National Infrastructure. That said, 35% of authorities said they are actively trying to attract data centre investment, whilst a further 25% are working directly with developers. Only 15% of councils reported having conducted formal economic appraisals on the potential benefits of data centre siting.

Finally, AI is another area of evolving interest. Whilst 75% of councils believe artificial intelligence could help improve connectivity delivery and uptake, none reported using AI tools to shape or optimise interventions.

Dr Andrew Muir, Chief Executive of FarrPoint, said councils are increasingly moving towards inclusion and day-to-day reliability. "What's striking this year is that councils are increasingly moving towards inclusion and day-to-day reliability. The conversation is shifting from infrastructure to determining whether people can participate in modern life," said Muir. "Connectivity is still a strategic enabler of economic growth, public service reform and regional resilience, but councils say they need clearer signals and stronger partnership from industry and central government if they're to turn ambition into delivery."