- Openreach owns and maintains the network up to and including the master socket (the NTE5 faceplate boundary), as set out in its published Codes of Practice.
- Wiring on the customer side of the master socket faceplate is the consumer's responsibility, not Openreach's, under standard provider terms.
- You do not contact Openreach directly: Ofcom rules route fault reports through your communications provider, who instructs Openreach where the fault is on the network side.
- Openreach is the access network operator used by most UK providers, so the same wiring boundary applies regardless of which retail ISP you buy from.
- The PSTN is being withdrawn as the UK migrates to all-IP services, with Openreach's published programme targeting completion in 2027, changing how some internal wiring carries voice.
Openreach is responsible for the line up to and including the master socket. Everything on the customer side of that socket, including extension wiring, is your responsibility.
Last reviewed: June 2026
Where the responsibility boundary actually sits
Phone wiring in a UK home is split at a single, well-defined point: the master socket. The master socket is the first telephone socket the line reaches inside the property, and on most modern installations it is an NTE5 unit with a removable lower faceplate. That faceplate is the formal demarcation between the access network and the customer's own equipment. Everything from the exchange, through the street, into the property and up to that boundary is Openreach's territory. Everything beyond it belongs to the person living there.
This split matters because it determines who pays. If a fault is proven to sit on the network side, the repair is handled at no charge to you through your provider. If the fault is on the customer side, you may be charged for an engineer visit, or you can resolve it yourself. Knowing where your problem sits before you report it can save an unnecessary call-out fee.
What Openreach owns and maintains
Openreach is the access network business that maintains the physical line into the vast majority of UK homes, whichever retail provider sells you the service. Its responsibility covers the cable from the exchange or street cabinet, the drop wire or underground feed into the building, and the master socket itself. Where the master socket is an NTE5, Openreach is responsible up to and including the lower faceplate that the customer wiring plugs into.
Because Openreach is wholesale-only, it does not deal with the public directly for most residential faults. Its Codes of Practice and the network access arrangements it publishes describe this boundary and the engineering standards that apply. If an Openreach engineer attends and finds the fault is on the customer side of the master socket, the visit can become chargeable, and that charge is applied through your retail provider.
It is worth understanding why the boundary is drawn at the master socket rather than at the property wall or some other point. The master socket is the last piece of equipment Openreach installs and tests to a known standard, so it is the natural place to draw the line of responsibility. Anything beyond it has typically been added, altered or extended by occupants over the years, often by different people using different methods, which is precisely why Openreach cannot guarantee or be accountable for it. The faceplate boundary gives both sides a clear, testable point at which responsibility changes hands.
What the consumer is responsible for
On the customer side of the master socket faceplate, the wiring is yours. This includes any extension sockets, the cable running between them, internal faceplates, and the telephones or routers plugged in. If an extension socket has a loose connection, corroded contacts, or wiring damaged during decorating or building work, that is for the householder to put right, not Openreach.
A practical test is built into the NTE5 master socket. Unscrewing the lower faceplate disconnects all internal extension wiring and exposes a test socket behind it. Plugging a phone or router directly into that test socket bypasses every metre of internal cable. If the fault disappears when you use the test socket, the problem is in your internal wiring and is your responsibility. If it persists, the fault is more likely on the network side and should be reported to your provider.
Ring wiring and other legacy issues
Many older UK homes were wired using a method known as ring wiring, where a third conductor (often referred to as terminal 3) was run around the extensions to support the bell circuit on older telephones. Ring wiring is a legacy of the analogue phone era and can cause problems on modern broadband. The extra wire effectively acts as an aerial, picking up electrical interference that degrades the digital signal and reduces broadband speed and stability.
Because ring wiring sits on the customer side of the master socket, sorting it out is the householder's responsibility. Common remedies include removing the bell wire connection at the extensions or fitting a filtered faceplate at the master socket that separates the voice and broadband paths. As the UK completes its migration from the analogue PSTN to all-IP services under Openreach's published programme, voice increasingly travels over the broadband connection rather than the old copper voice path, which makes clean internal wiring and a tidy master socket setup more important, not less.
How responsibility splits at a glance
The table below summarises where common wiring elements fall and who deals with each. It is a guide to the standard boundary used across providers that rely on the Openreach access network.
| Wiring element | Side of master socket | Responsible party |
|---|---|---|
| External drop wire or underground feed | Network side | Openreach (via your provider) |
| Master socket / NTE5 lower faceplate | Boundary point | Openreach up to and including faceplate |
| Extension sockets and cable | Customer side | Consumer |
| Ring / bell wire (terminal 3) | Customer side | Consumer |
| Telephone, router and cabling to them | Customer side | Consumer |
Where your ISP fits in
Your communications provider is the organisation you actually deal with. Ofcom rules require providers to handle fault reporting and, where the fault is on the network, to arrange the Openreach repair on your behalf. The provider acts as the single point of contact: you describe the problem, they run line tests, and they decide whether to dispatch an Openreach engineer or advise you that the issue appears to be internal.
An ISP engineer or an Openreach engineer acting for your provider will generally restore service up to the master socket and confirm a clean line there. They are not obliged to repair or rewire your internal extensions free of charge, because that wiring is not part of the network they are paid to maintain. If you ask them to work on internal wiring, expect that to be treated as chargeable customer-side work.
The relationship between you, your provider and Openreach works as a chain. You hold a contract only with your retail provider, the provider holds a wholesale agreement with Openreach, and Openreach maintains the physical line. This is why you should never try to call Openreach directly for a residential fault, and why your provider is the right party to push when a repair stalls. The chain also explains why responsibility for internal wiring stops with you: it sits entirely outside every contract in that chain, so no party in it is paid to look after it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is responsible for the phone wiring inside my house?
You are. Any wiring on the customer side of the master socket faceplate, including extension sockets and the cable between them, is the householder's responsibility. Openreach and your provider maintain the line only up to and including the master socket, so internal faults are not covered as free network repairs.
What wiring does Openreach own?
Openreach owns and maintains the access network from the exchange or street cabinet, the external feed into the property, and the master socket itself. On an NTE5 master socket this extends up to and including the removable lower faceplate. Anything you connect beyond that faceplate sits outside Openreach's responsibility.
What is ring wiring?
Ring wiring is a legacy method of connecting extension sockets that uses an extra conductor, often called terminal 3, to drive the bell on older telephones. On modern broadband it can act like an aerial and pick up interference, reducing speed and stability. Because it sits on the customer side of the master socket, addressing it is the householder's responsibility.
Can I ask my ISP to fix internal wiring?
You can ask, but internal wiring is not part of the network your provider is paid to maintain, so this is typically treated as chargeable customer-side work. Your provider will restore and test the line up to the master socket as standard. Repairs or rewiring beyond that point are usually at your cost or done by you.
How do I know if my internal wiring is causing broadband problems?
Use the test socket behind the NTE5 master socket faceplate. Unscrew the lower faceplate, plug your router directly into the exposed test socket, and check whether the problem persists. If service improves, the fault is in your internal wiring; if it remains, the fault is more likely on the network and should be reported to your provider.