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on 11-02-2026 10:03 AM
Hi all,
I’m hoping someone here might be able to offer some insight, as I’ve been trying to resolve this for weeks without success.
Around 6–7 weeks ago my 5G home broadband speeds dropped overnight from a consistent 266–300 Mbps down to a stable 30–50 Mbps. The change was sudden and has remained completely consistent ever since.
Current setup:
Three 5G Home Broadband
Outdoor Greenpacket Y5-210MU router
Approx. 440 metres direct line of sight to the mast
Connected to 5G n78 (100 MHz)
RSRP around -71 dBm
SINR around 31 dB
Carrier aggregation present
Internal network:
Originally:
Greenpacket → Eero 6 router → network
Now (for isolation/testing):
Greenpacket → Ubiquiti switch → Ubiquiti APs
I have also tested with the Greenpacket directly connected and isolated, removing other internal hardware from the equation.
Signal quality is excellent and unchanged.
Behaviour:
Download ramps quickly to around 40–50 Mbps and then sits there
Upload has increased from ~20 Mbps to ~30 Mbps
No time-of-day variation (same speeds morning, evening, overnight)
Same results across multiple speed test servers
Same behaviour over wired and Wi-Fi
What I’ve done so far:
Contacted Three support multiple times
Router replaced (same SIM used initially)
Recently obtained a brand new replacement SIM — no change
Rebooted and power cycled multiple times
Tested different internal network configurations
Tried multiple speed test servers
Confirmed strong signal and correct bands
The issue persists exactly the same across different routers, SIMs, and internal setups.
From testing and elimination this does not appear to be:
Congestion (no time-of-day variation)
Signal degradation (excellent RSRP and SINR)
Router hardware fault
Internal network bottleneck
The behaviour feels like a consistent throughput ceiling being applied upstream. The download speed hits ~40–50 Mbps quickly and stays there, rather than fluctuating like congestion would.
Has anyone experienced a similar sudden cap?
Could this be a mast-side configuration change or some form of network-level shaping?
Is there a specific way to get this escalated to the network team rather than standard troubleshooting?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated, as I feel I’ve exhausted the usual support routes.
Thanks in advance.
Spen
25-02-2026 02:31 PM - edited 25-02-2026 02:32 PM
did you get any help with this as my phone and Broadband have both dropped from 300mbp to 10mbs on a good day and i have done everything they suggest but nothing has worked also paid £85 to use my phone in Egypt and Greece and it didn't work after the first hour in Egypt and has no options for refunds this service is lacking in so many ways its unbelievable
on 13-03-2026 06:11 AM
Traffic shaping / QoS profile
Mobile operators sometimes apply Quality of Service profiles to home broadband SIMs.
If a profile is mis-applied you can end up with a hard throughput ceiling like:
30 Mbps
50 Mbps
100 Mbps
The fact you briefly see 200–300 Mbps before it settles suggests the session starts unrestricted and then a policy rule kicks in.
2. Band fallback or anchor band limitation
5G NSA (which most UK mobile broadband uses) relies on a 4G anchor band.
If that anchor band is limited, your total throughput can look capped even though 5G is technically connected.
Typical LTE anchor limits can land right around:
40–60 Mbps
Which is suspiciously close to your numbers.
3. Backhaul capacity limit on the mast
Sometimes the cell sector backhaul gets capped or temporarily limited during upgrades or faults.
That can create a ceiling that affects home broadband devices first.
4. Device profile provisioning
Three’s network assigns devices a subscriber profile tied to the SIM IMEI class.
If the SIM has been placed in the wrong profile bucket you can see consistent ceilings.
Tests that help prove it
Engineers respond faster when the evidence is tidy.
Try:
1. Fast.com vs Speedtest
Netflix’s Fast.com often exposes shaping because it uses different traffic classification.
2. Multiple servers
Test to:
London
Manchester
Amsterdam
If every test hits the same ceiling, it strengthens the shaping theory.
3. Different device with the SIM
If possible:
put the SIM in a 5G phone
run a speed test outside
If the phone also caps around 40–50 Mbps, the issue is network-side, not router-side.
4. Check the router radio stats Look for:
RSRP
RSRQ
SINR
Band numbers
Good signal with a flat speed cap is another clue.