Digi arrived in Belgium with a simple promise: the cheapest fibre on the market. From €10/month for 500 Mbps, with no price hike after twelve months, the deal is shaking up providers used to introductory promos that climb once the first year is over. But a low price isn't everything: coverage, the lack of TV and the terms deserve a closer look. Here is our review.
How much does Digi fibre really cost?
Digi offers fibre from €10/month for 500 Mbps, up to around twenty euros for multi-gigabit speeds (recorded June 2026). Above all, the provider commits to a stable rate: no hike after twelve months. That's where the real difference lies. With most competitors, an attractive entry rate for the first six to twelve months hides a much higher bill from the thirteenth month. In practice, a deal shown at €10 with Digi stays at €10, whereas a "6 months free" promo elsewhere can double afterwards. Over two years, the gap becomes significant.
Should you check coverage before subscribing?
Yes, it's the most important step. Digi's FTTH network is rolling out progressively and still covers only a limited part of Belgium, prioritising certain municipalities in the major cities such as Brussels or Charleroi. Two neighbouring streets can have different coverage. Before even looking at the price, test your eligibility at your exact address on the provider's website. If Digi fibre doesn't reach you, the cheapest deal in the country is useless — and you'll need a provider that actually covers your street.
Does Digi offer television and bundles?
No. Digi sells pure internet: no set-top box, no classic channels, no internet + TV + mobile bundle like the incumbents. For a household that watches TV via a box, that's a real gap. But for a household that mostly streams (Netflix, Disney+, online channels), the lack of TV isn't a problem — it partly explains the low price. In practice, the question is simple: are you paying today for a TV you no longer watch? If so, an internet-only deal like Digi's is often cheaper.
Is 500 Mbps enough for a household?
For the vast majority of households, yes. 500 Mbps covers 4K streaming on several screens, video calls, remote work and online gaming, even with several people connected at once. Multi-gigabit (1, 2 or 10 Gbps) only makes real sense for specific uses: creators sending large files, homes with many devices, or enthusiasts who want the maximum. For example, the most popular deal in Belgium is around 300 Mbps: proof that the race for speed far exceeds most households' real needs. Better to choose a speed suited to your usage than a marketing figure your home Wi-Fi won't exploit anyway.
Who is the Digi deal really for?
Digi is excellent for a specific profile: a price-sensitive household that has Digi fibre available at its address and doesn't need classic TV. Student, young professional, remote worker on a tight budget: the two-year saving is real and the stable price avoids nasty surprises. Conversely, if you want an all-in-one bundle with a set-top box, guaranteed coverage everywhere, or an established provider's customer service, look at Proximus, Telenet or VOO instead. To place Digi against its competitors and see which deal covers your area, see our ranking of the best fibre internet deals in Belgium.
Conclusion
Digi keeps its promise where it's available: it's currently the cheapest fibre in Belgium, with a stable, honest price. Its two limits — still-partial coverage and no TV — aren't drawbacks for everyone. The right approach: test your eligibility first, then compare the total cost over two years, TV included or not, against the other deals in your area.
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Nicolas suit le marché belge des télécoms et le déploiement de la fibre depuis plus de huit ans. Ancien technicien réseau devenu analyste indépendant, il teste lui-même les connexions qu'il compare : il mesure les débits réels à différentes heures de la journée, lit les conditions ligne par ligne et traque les hausses de prix qui tombent après douze mois. Son objectif : aider les ménages belges à choisir une offre fibre qui tient ses promesses, au bon débit et au juste prix, sans jargon ni argument commercial.
