Households will pay at least $60 – and up to $190 – a month for internet services on the National Broadband Network, data from an internet provider shows.
The first retail pricing for services over the $36 billion NBN were released by internet provider Internode on Thursday.
Packages start at $59.95 a month for a basic 12-megabit-per-second (Mbps) service with a 30-gigabyte quota for downloads and uploads, The Australian newspaper reported on Friday.
At the top end, Internode said it would charge $189.95 a month for a 100Mbps service with a 1000GB download quota.
Internode blamed the high prices on ‘existing flaws in the NBN Co wholesale charging model’ and warned that regional customers could have to pay more to connect to the network.
Telstra, the commonwealth and the builder NBN Co signed definitive agreements for the rollout of the $35.9 billion scheme in June.
NBN Co plans to provide a fibre-optic cable network to 93 per cent of the population while the remaining seven per cent will have either fixed wireless or satellite broadband over the next decade.
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