Full Fibre Installation in Scotland: What to Expect

February 4, 2026
Fibre broadband installation Scotland with Highland cow

Thinking about switching to full fibre broadband but dreading the install?
You’re not alone.

Most folk aren’t worried about the speed. They’re worried about the hassle.
Drilling. Delays. Engineers turning up when you’re mid-call. That sort of thing.

So this is a no-nonsense guide to broadband installation in Scotland, written to remove the uncertainty. 

After reading, you’ll know exactly what happens, what you need to do, and what might slow things down (without any promises we can’t keep).

First things first: what “full fibre” actually means

Scottish household using full fibre broadband on multiple devices

A lot of packages get called “fibre”, but full fibre broadband is the proper end-to-end version.

It means the fibre-optic cable runs all the way into your home, rather than stopping at a cabinet and using older copper wiring for the final stretch. That’s why it tends to be more reliable and better at coping with busy evenings, multiple devices, and work calls that absolutely need to behave.

And if you’ve seen the term FTTP, that’s just the industry’s way of saying “full fibre into the property”.

From order to online: how a full fibre install usually works

Every home is different, but most installs follow the same general path.

Step 1: Booking and checks

Once you’ve checked availability and placed an order, an installation date gets booked in.

But don’t worry. If anything looks like it’ll need extra steps, you’ll be told upfront.

Step 2: The engineer visit

On the day of installation, an engineer will come out and talk you through what they’re going to do before they start.

And yes, there’s often a small amount of drilling, but it’s usually just one small entry hole to bring the cable inside. 

No chaos. No living-room demolition.

Step 3: Router setup and a quick check it’s all working

Once the fibre is live, your router gets connected and tested.

If you’ve chosen a package with 900Mbps broadband or gigabit broadband, it won’t be long before you notice a big difference in how steady your connection runs, especially when lots is going on at once.

How long does installation take?

In many homes, full fibre installation is done in 2 to 4 hours.

So while plenty of installs are straightforward, it’s always best to plan for a half day at home, just to keep things stress-free.

What you’ll need to do before the engineer arrives

That’s it. Nothing too scary, right? And if you manage all that, the engineer will handle the rest.

Flats vs houses: what’s different?

Full fibre broadband router setup in Scottish home

If you’re in a house

Houses are usually the simplest installs, as there’s often a straightforward route from outside to where you want the router.

If you’re in a flat or tenement

But none of this is a deal-breaker when it comes to accessing full fibre broadband. It just means timelines can vary a bit more.

Why full fibre availability can still vary street by street

Full fibre rollout isn’t like flicking a switch for a whole town or city. It’s more like laying new tracks, one stretch at a time.

That’s why you can have: One street with full fibre live and taking orders. The next street over still waiting. And two neighbours with different results because they’re connected to different bits of network

Here’s more to explain why:

That’s why the quickest way to know what’s live is simple: check your address. Because unfortunately, postcode-level promises can be a bit… optimistic.

Check full fibre availability at your address