TL;DR
- An unlimited mobile data plan does not guarantee unrestricted throughput at all times; operators may throttle speeds under a fair-use policy or traffic management clause.
- Ofcom's General Conditions require operators to disclose any traffic management practices, data thresholds, and their effects on speed before a consumer signs up.
- Fair-use policies vary by operator: some specify a monthly GB threshold after which speeds may be reduced; others manage traffic only during peak congestion periods.
- Operators must provide a Summary Information Document setting out speeds and material limitations in plain language at point of sale.
- If throttling is applied without prior disclosure, consumers can raise a formal complaint and escalate to an Ofcom-approved ADR scheme if unresolved.
The gap between "unlimited" and unrestricted
The term unlimited in mobile marketing has a specific commercial meaning rather than a technical one. UK operators use it to indicate the absence of a hard monthly data cap - meaning your service will not be cut off because you have exceeded a stated gigabyte limit. What it does not guarantee is constant access to the network's full available speed regardless of your usage volume or the time of day. Operators retain the right, under their contract terms and under applicable network management principles, to manage traffic in ways that affect throughput.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has issued guidance on the use of unlimited in advertising, requiring that any material restrictions be clearly disclosed alongside the claim. Ofcom's General Conditions of Entitlement - the legally binding framework governing all UK publicly available electronic communications services - require operators to disclose traffic management policies, their triggers, and their effects as part of pre-contractual information. Reading both the advertising small print and the contract's Summary Information Document is the only reliable way to understand what an unlimited plan actually delivers.
How traffic management works on unlimited plans
Traffic management - sometimes called network management - refers to any technical mechanism an operator uses to control how its network capacity is distributed among subscribers. On unlimited plans, two forms are common. The first is congestion-based management: the operator monitors real-time load on individual mast sectors and applies speed limits to heavy users during periods when the cell is approaching capacity. This is temporary and lifts once congestion eases. The second is threshold-based deprioritisation: a subscriber who uses more than a stated volume of data in a billing cycle is moved to a lower-priority queue on the network, meaning they receive slower speeds when the network is busy, even if they are not themselves congesting it at that moment.
Some operators combine both approaches. Others apply neither and offer genuinely unconstrained unlimited plans, though these typically command a higher price. The key information to look for in a plan's terms is: whether a monthly GB threshold triggers deprioritisation; at what point in the day or month that threshold applies; and what the minimum speed floor is during any management period. Ofcom's Net Neutrality framework, implemented through the European Electronic Communications Code as retained in UK law after 2020, contains requirements on how operators disclose and implement traffic management.
| Policy Term | What It Means | When It Triggers | Disclosure Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Congestion management | Speeds reduced when local cell is busy | Peak hours on a congested mast | Must be disclosed pre-contract |
| Deprioritisation threshold | Heavy users moved to lower priority queue | After stated monthly GB level | Threshold must appear in Key Information |
| Tethering / hotspot limits | Cap on data shared to other devices | Once tethering allowance exhausted | Must be disclosed; separate to on-device data |
| Roaming data cap | Unlimited plan capped when abroad | On departure from UK | Must be disclosed; see roaming terms |
| Application-specific management | Specific app types slowed (e.g. video) | At operator discretion unless contractually limited | Must be disclosed; Net Neutrality rules apply |
What Ofcom requires operators to disclose
Ofcom's General Conditions of Entitlement (specifically GC C1, which implements the European Electronic Communications Code as retained in UK law) require providers of publicly available electronic communications services to supply a Summary Information Document before a contract is entered into. This document must set out, among other things, the minimum, normally available, and maximum download and upload speeds, and any traffic management policies that may affect those speeds. Where an unlimited data plan carries a deprioritisation threshold, that threshold and its effect must appear in the Summary Information Document.
Ofcom has published supplementary guidance on how operators should describe their traffic management policies in plain language, as part of its Net Neutrality framework. The regulator can take enforcement action against operators that fail to disclose material limitations, or that describe plans in a misleading way. Consumers who believe they signed up for a plan without adequate disclosure of speed-limiting conditions have grounds to raise a formal complaint with the operator and, if not resolved within eight weeks, to escalate to an Ofcom-approved ADR provider such as Ombudsman Services: Communications or the Communications and Internet Services Adjudication Scheme (CISAS).
Tethering and hotspot restrictions on unlimited plans
A specific and frequently misunderstood aspect of unlimited plans concerns tethering - using the phone as a mobile hotspot to share its data connection with a laptop or other device. Many operators treat tethering data as a separate allowance from on-device data. An unlimited plan may include, for example, a stated tethering allowance of 20 or 30 GB per month, after which hotspot speeds are throttled even though the plan is otherwise unlimited. This is legal and common, but it must be disclosed in the contract.
For consumers who rely on their phone's hotspot as a secondary or emergency internet connection, the tethering allowance is as important as the headline data figure. It should be checked explicitly in the plan's Key Information or Summary Information Document rather than assumed to match the headline unlimited claim.
Finding and reading the fair-use policy
Operators are required to make their traffic management and fair-use policies accessible. The Summary Information Document provided at point of sale is the primary reference. Policies are also typically available in the operator's terms and conditions on its website, and sometimes in a dedicated network management or fair-use transparency notice. Ofcom's net neutrality transparency requirements mean operators must publish a summary of their traffic management practices in a consumer-accessible location.
When comparing plans, searching the operator's website for terms such as "fair use policy", "network management", or "traffic management" alongside the plan name is a reliable method. If the information is unclear or difficult to find, calling the operator and asking specifically whether the unlimited plan includes a deprioritisation threshold or tethering cap - and requesting the answer in writing via email - creates a record that can be used if a dispute arises later.
What this means in practice
Consider a fictional scenario: Tomasz takes out an unlimited SIM-only plan with a mid-tier UK operator, attracted by the headline unlimited claim for heavy video streaming. In the third week of his first month, having used a large volume of data, he notices his streaming quality dropping noticeably in the evenings. He checks his operator's app and sees a notification that he has passed the plan's deprioritisation threshold; during busy periods his data is now lower priority on congested cells. He reviews the Summary Information Document he was given at sign-up and finds the threshold was disclosed, though not highlighted prominently. Having the policy in writing means he has no grounds for a billing complaint, but the experience prompts him to switch, at his next renewal opportunity, to a plan where the operator does not apply a deprioritisation threshold. The lesson: reading the Summary Information Document for the specific threshold figure before signing is the only reliable way to know what unlimited actually means for a given plan.
Related Guides
How we verified this
This article draws on Ofcom's General Conditions of Entitlement (GC C1), Ofcom's Net Neutrality guidance and transparency requirements, Ofcom's Treating Customers Fairly framework, guidance from the Advertising Standards Authority on the use of unlimited in advertising, and Ofcom's published information on Alternative Dispute Resolution for communications services.
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
Is unlimited mobile data actually unlimited?
In a technical sense, no. Unlimited means there is no hard monthly gigabyte cap that will cut off your service. However, operators may reduce your speed during congested periods or after you exceed a deprioritisation threshold, and tethering is often subject to a separate, lower allowance. Ofcom requires all material restrictions to be disclosed upfront in the Summary Information Document. Reading those terms before signing is essential to understanding what you are actually purchasing.
What fair use applies to unlimited mobile data?
Fair-use terms vary by operator and plan. Common elements include a monthly GB threshold after which you may be deprioritised on congested cells, a separate tethering allowance, and a roaming data cap when outside the UK. Some operators apply time-of-day congestion management that affects all users on a busy cell, not just heavy users. The specific thresholds and policies must appear in the plan's Key Information and Summary Information Document under Ofcom's rules.
Can my operator slow my data on an unlimited plan?
Yes, provided the right to do so is disclosed in the contract. Ofcom's General Conditions permit operators to manage traffic, including through speed reduction, as long as the policy and its triggers are clearly disclosed before the contract is signed. Operators cannot apply undisclosed speed restrictions. If you experience throttling that you believe was not disclosed upfront, you have grounds for a formal complaint and potential ADR escalation.
How do I find my operator's fair use policy?
Start with the Summary Information Document given to you when you signed up - it must include any traffic management policies. If you no longer have it, search your operator's website for the terms "fair use policy", "network management", or "traffic management" alongside your plan name. Operators are required under Ofcom's net neutrality transparency rules to publish these policies in a consumer-accessible form. You can also call customer services and ask for the policy in writing.
What happens if I exceed fair use on unlimited data?
Typically, your speed is reduced during busy network periods rather than your data being cut off entirely. The deprioritisation means you receive lower throughput when the cell you are connected to is congested, while other subscribers - who have not exceeded the threshold - receive higher speeds. The throttling usually lifts at the next billing cycle reset. You cannot ordinarily be charged extra for exceeding a fair-use threshold on an unlimited plan; the mechanism is speed reduction, not additional billing.