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Keeping Your UK Mobile Number When Living or Working Abroad

Moving abroad does not automatically mean losing your UK mobile number, but the options depend on your contract terms, roaming costs, and whether you are prepared to port the number to an alternative service. Here is a practical overview of the choices.

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Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor, Kaeltripton
Published 5 Jun 2026
Last reviewed 5 Jun 2026
✓ Fact-checked
Keeping Your UK Mobile Number When Living or Working Abroad
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Mobile & 5G · Number Portability

TL;DR

  • A UK mobile number on an active pay-monthly contract can be kept alive while abroad, but the contract will continue to bill monthly and roaming costs outside included allowances can be significant.
  • Most UK operators include EU roaming in monthly plans, but extended stays or non-EU destinations typically trigger additional charges; some operators have fair-use data caps that apply abroad.
  • Porting your UK number to a VoIP provider (such as a UK-based business VoIP service) allows you to retain the number as a virtual line, reachable via internet, without maintaining a cellular contract.
  • A PAC code enables number portability between UK mobile operators, but porting to a foreign mobile operator is not possible under UK number portability rules, which apply only within the UK network.
  • Early termination of a contract before the minimum term ends will typically incur an early termination fee calculated on remaining monthly charges; Ofcom rules cap the fee basis.

What Happens to a UK Contract When You Move Abroad

A UK mobile contract is a legal agreement between you and a UK-regulated operator. Moving abroad does not automatically terminate the contract, suspend billing, or change its terms. You remain liable for monthly charges for the duration of the minimum term, regardless of where you physically use the phone. If you make calls, send texts, or use data while abroad - even in countries where your operator includes roaming - the contract mechanics remain the same: the monthly plan fee is charged, and any usage outside the included allowance is charged additionally at the operator's published roaming rates.

Some operators include a requirement in their terms and conditions that the SIM be used primarily in the UK, or that continued international use beyond a defined period may affect the service or trigger fair-use policies. Ofcom's general conditions for operators do not specify a maximum permitted period of use abroad, but operators retain the right to apply fair-use provisions and to amend or terminate service if usage patterns are inconsistent with the plan's intended purpose. The specific terms vary between operators and plans, and it is worth reviewing the relevant contract documentation before an extended stay abroad.

Roaming Costs: What to Expect and Plan For

Since the UK's departure from the European Union, UK operators are not legally required to offer EU roaming at no additional charge under the EU Roaming Regulation, which no longer applies to UK-originated plans. However, most major UK operators have voluntarily maintained inclusive EU roaming as a commercial feature of their plans, though some have introduced a daily or monthly roaming surcharge on lower-tier contracts. The position for non-EU destinations varies considerably by operator and destination.

For calls received on a UK number while the SIM is roaming abroad, the receiving party pays nothing - the caller pays their normal domestic UK rate to call a UK mobile. However, the SIM's subscriber may face a "receive call" charge from their operator for incoming calls while roaming, depending on the plan. This mechanism - known as the Calling Party Pays principle modified by roaming agreements - means that being reachable on a UK number abroad has a potential cost even when you are not initiating calls. Checking the specific incoming call roaming rate with the operator before relying on the number as a contact point is advisable.

OptionHow It WorksRetains UK Number?Key Considerations
Keep existing contract active while abroadContinue paying monthly; use roaming allowance or pay additional chargesYesOngoing monthly cost; operator fair-use policies may apply
Move to a SIM-only plan on low monthly tariffDowngrade to cheapest available plan to reduce monthly cost while maintaining the numberYesMinimum monthly cost still applies; roaming may not be included
Port number to a UK VoIP providerTransfer UK number to an internet-based phone service; receive calls and SMS via app over Wi-Fi or local dataYes (as VoIP line)No cellular plan required; dependent on internet connectivity; call quality varies
Obtain PAC and port to another UK operatorMove number to a different UK mobile operator, potentially one with better international roaming termsYesNew contract required; ETF may apply on current contract; only works within UK mobile network
Allow contract to lapse / number to be reclaimedStop paying; operator will eventually disconnect and reclaim the numberNo - number lost permanentlyRisk of debt for unpaid contract; UK number permanently lost

Porting Your UK Number to a VoIP Service

UK number portability rules, administered under Ofcom's General Conditions, allow a mobile number to be ported between UK operators, and in some cases from a mobile operator to a VoIP provider that is registered as a UK communications provider and participates in the portability framework. This option is increasingly used by UK nationals who move abroad long-term and want to retain their number as a virtual line without carrying the cost of a live cellular contract.

The process involves obtaining a PAC (Porting Authorisation Code) from the current operator - which Ofcom requires operators to provide within one working day of request - and presenting it to the receiving VoIP provider. The receiving provider must also be a registered UK communications provider capable of accepting ported geographic or non-geographic numbers. Not all consumer VoIP services are set up to accept ported mobile numbers; it is worth confirming the provider's porting capability before initiating the process. Once ported, calls to the UK number route to the VoIP platform and are answered via an app on any internet-connected device, anywhere in the world.

PAC Codes and What They Can and Cannot Do

A PAC (Porting Authorisation Code) is a nine-character alphanumeric code that authorises the transfer of a mobile number from one UK operator to another. Ofcom rules require that operators provide a PAC within one working day of a request made by text to 65075 (the industry standard number) or via any other customer service channel. The PAC is valid for 30 days from issue.

What a PAC cannot do is enable porting to a foreign mobile operator. UK mobile number portability operates within the UK's national numbering plan, administered by Ofcom. A UK +44 7xxx number cannot be transferred to a German, Spanish, or any other non-UK operator's network as a live mobile number under the portability framework. A UK number, by definition, remains a UK number. If a person moving abroad wants local mobile number capability, they will need to obtain a local SIM or eSIM from a local operator separately - as a new subscription, not as a ported continuation of the UK number.

Contract Early Termination and the Costs Involved

If maintaining a UK contract while abroad is not cost-effective and porting is not the right solution, early termination is the remaining option. Under Ofcom rules and the general conditions that operators must apply, the maximum early termination charge is calculated on the basis of the remaining minimum monthly contract payments, excluding any element that relates to the cost of a subsidised handset where the handset has already been paid off or is being retained. Operators cannot charge fees that go beyond the financial value of the remaining contract, and must not levy exit fees that are disproportionate or act as a barrier to switching.

In practice, early termination fees are often quoted as the sum of remaining monthly line rental payments to the end of the minimum term, which can amount to a significant figure if the move abroad happens early in a 24-month contract. It is worth comparing the total early termination cost against the cost of simply continuing to pay the monthly charge at a reduced usage level, or against the cost of downgrading to a lower monthly tariff for the remaining term.

What this means in practice

Consider Priya, a software developer from Manchester who accepts a two-year secondment in Singapore. She has fourteen months remaining on a 24-month UK mobile contract. She wants to keep her UK number because UK-based clients call it regularly. She requests a PAC from her current operator and ports her number to a UK VoIP provider that accepts ported mobile numbers, for a modest monthly fee. She installs the VoIP app on her Singapore phone, which runs on a local Singaporean eSIM. When UK clients call her UK number, the call routes to her app via the internet, wherever she is. She also retains the option to port the number back to a UK cellular operator when she returns. Her UK contract is terminated early; the early termination fee, calculated on remaining monthly payments at her plan rate, is weighed against the alternative of paying fourteen months of a contract she cannot use effectively, and she judges the fee acceptable.

How we verified this

This article draws on Ofcom General Conditions of Entitlement (published on ofcom.org.uk), Ofcom guidance on mobile number portability and PAC code rules, Ofcom's published guidance on roaming and switching, and the Consumer Rights Act 2015 as it applies to contract terms. References to early termination fee calculation methodology reflect Ofcom's publicly stated requirements for operator compliance.

Disclaimer: Kaeltripton.com is an independent UK editorial publisher. We are not regulated by Ofcom or the FCA and we do not sell or arrange mobile services, insurance, or financial products. This content is for general information only and is not legal, financial, or technical advice. Rules, prices, and operator policies change. Verify the current position with Ofcom, GOV.UK, the ICO, or your provider before acting. ICO registered ZC135439. Last reviewed: 2026-06-05.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I keep my UK mobile number when living abroad?

Yes, with planning. You can maintain an active UK contract and use the number via roaming, or port the number to a UK VoIP provider that accepts ported mobile numbers, allowing you to receive calls and texts via an internet connection from anywhere in the world. The right approach depends on how frequently the number needs to handle live calls, what ongoing cost you are prepared to sustain, and whether the number is your primary business or personal contact point.

How much does it cost to keep a UK number active abroad?

The cost depends on which method you choose. Keeping an existing mobile contract active means continuing to pay the monthly plan fee, plus any applicable roaming charges for usage outside included allowances. Porting the number to a VoIP platform typically involves a lower monthly fee for the virtual line, though VoIP providers' pricing varies. Simply downgrading to a low-cost SIM-only plan while abroad is a middle option that maintains the cellular line at a reduced ongoing cost.

Can I transfer my UK number to a VoIP service?

Yes, in many cases. UK number portability rules administered by Ofcom allow mobile numbers to be ported from a mobile operator to a VoIP provider, provided the VoIP provider is registered as a UK communications provider and participates in the number portability framework. You obtain a PAC from your current operator (available within one working day of request) and submit it to the receiving VoIP provider. Confirm the provider's ability to accept ported mobile numbers before starting the process, as not all consumer VoIP services support this.

What happens to my mobile contract if I move abroad?

Your contract continues in full force. Monthly charges continue to be billed, and you remain liable for them for the remainder of the minimum term. Moving abroad does not constitute grounds for contract termination without an early termination fee in most standard contract terms. Some operators' terms and conditions include provisions about primary UK usage; extended international use may trigger fair-use policies in some cases. Review your specific contract terms, or contact the operator to discuss your options before departure.

Can I use PAC to port a UK number to a foreign operator?

No. A PAC code enables portability within the UK mobile numbering framework only. It permits transfer of a UK number between UK-registered operators and certain UK VoIP providers, but it does not enable transfer to a foreign operator. UK numbers (+44 7xxx) are allocated within the UK National Telephone Numbering Plan, administered by Ofcom, and remain UK numbers regardless of where the subscriber is physically located. If you need a local number in your destination country, you will need to obtain a separate local subscription.

Sources

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Editorial Disclaimer

The content on Kaeltripton.com is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, legal or regulatory advice. Kaeltripton.com is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and is not a financial adviser, mortgage broker, insurance intermediary or investment firm. Nothing on this site should be construed as a personal recommendation. Rates, figures and product details are indicative only, subject to change without notice, and should always be verified directly with the relevant provider, HMRC, the FCA register, the Bank of England, Ofgem or other appropriate authority before any financial decision is made. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. If you require regulated financial advice, please consult a qualified adviser authorised by the FCA.

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Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor · Kaeltripton.com
Chandraketu (CK) Tripathi, founder and lead editor of Kael Tripton. 22 years in finance and marketing across 23 markets. Writes on UK personal finance, tax, mortgages, insurance, energy, and investing. Sources: HMRC, FCA, Ofgem, BoE, ONS.

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