Many people in the UK are overpaying for their mobile phones without even realising it. When an initial contract finishes, the automatic reaction for many is to simply let it roll over or accept whatever upgrade the current network offers.
This passive renewal routine means that millions of consumers remain tied to expensive tariffs that don’t match their actual daily needs. It’s easy to assume you’re getting a good deal with large data allocations, but the reality is that you’re probably paying a premium for data you never use.
The Financial Impact of Contract Inertia
The scale of this problem is laid bare in Ofcom’s 2026 Pricing and Consumer Engagement Report. Despite falling market prices across the board, 28% of broadband customers remain out of contract. On average, those customers pay between £7 and £9 a month more than customers who are in contract. That translates to as much as £108 a year wasted on broadband alone.
The same pattern appears in mobile. Nearly four in ten pay-monthly mobile customers subscribe to plans offering more than 50GB of data per month, but only 5% actually use that much. More than half of all pay-monthly customers use 20% or less of their monthly data allowance. The result is that millions of people are paying for capacity they will never touch.
Most people end up in this position because mobile providers make the renewal process incredibly frictionless. When your contract expires, your network will keep charging you the same high monthly fee rather than prompting you to move to something cheaper. Instead of proactively looking for a better deal, busy consumers often ignore the notifications and let the expensive payments continue month after month.
How to Choose a Right-Sized Mobile Package
Breaking out of this costly cycle requires an honest assessment of your actual data habits. Ofcom’s 2026 report found that 29% of pay-monthly mobile users consume 2GB of data or less each month, and more than half use 20% or less of what their tariff includes. Despite this, 39% of pay-monthly customers subscribe to plans offering more than 50GB of data, even though only 5% actually use that much.
Major networks love to sell large 30GB, 100GB or unlimited data packages, but for a significant number of users the best 5GB SIM-only plans in the UK today offer more than enough headroom and cost a fraction of the price. This kind of switch can drop your monthly mobile bill to single figures without compromising your daily connectivity.
To put that into perspective, someone paying £25 a month for a bundled contract with 30GB of data they barely use could switch to a 5GB SIM-only plan for around £5 a month. That is a saving of £240 a year on mobile alone. Add in the potential £108 saving from re-contracting your broadband, and a single household could realistically claw back over £300 a year just by choosing the right plans.
How to Audit Your Mobile Bill
To escape the mobile contract trap permanently, you should follow a simple process before your current deal rolls over. It only takes a few minutes, and the potential savings are well worth the effort. Here are the key actions to take:
- Check your actual data usage by reviewing your last three monthly bills on your provider’s app.
- Track data usage in the settings of your phone as well. This will tell you which apps in particular draw the most of your allowance. Though you might need to reset the statistics and track it manually over the month.
- Compare alternative packages from smaller MVNO providers that run on the same physical infrastructure as your current network.
- Choose flexible rolling monthly agreements instead of long commitments to keep your options open.
Switching has never been easier, either. Ofcom’s One Touch Switch process, introduced in September 2024, has already been used by over two million customers. You simply contact your new provider and they handle the rest. For mobile, you can text “PAC” to 65075 to receive your switching code and keep your number.
Final Remarks
Allowing your mobile phone contract to renew without a second thought is a direct route to wasting money. Ofcom’s latest data shows that the majority of pay-monthly mobile customers use only a small fraction of the data included in their plans, so downsizing to a smaller allowance is the most logical step to take.
On the broadband side, out-of-contract customers are paying up to £108 a year more than they need to, and a growing number of full-fibre providers are driving prices down further still.
By auditing your actual usage and switching to a tariff that fits, you could save well over £200 a year when you factor in both your mobile and broadband bills. Taking control of your digital spending doesn’t require hours of research. Making a deliberate, informed choice next time your contract ends will put money back where it belongs: in your pocket.
