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    Vox fibre packages

    Vox is one of South Africa's most established ISPs, strong on voice, IPTV and uncapped fibre bundles. Here's the full Vox fibre package list, what makes it different, and how it stacks up against Webafrica, Afrihost and MWeb.

    Cartoon Vox support agent holding glowing globe representing Vox fibre

    Vox fibre packages

    Vox sells uncapped fibre on every major SA network, Openserve, Vumatel, Frogfoot, Octotel and MetroFibre. The line cost is set by the FNO; Vox's markup pays for support, the bundled voice/IPTV add-ons and the router. Pricing is broadly the same across networks at the same speed tier, pick by what's available at your address.

    • 10 Mbps uncapped: from R459/month
    • 20 Mbps uncapped: from R599/month
    • 50 Mbps uncapped: from R749/month
    • 100 Mbps uncapped: from R899/month
    • 200 Mbps uncapped: from R1 099/month
    • 500 Mbps uncapped: from R1 299/month
    • 1 Gbps uncapped: from R1 549/month

    Every Vox fibre package is uncapped, unshaped and unthrottled. Vox bundles often include a free WiFi router on 24-month contracts, and free standard installation is standard on contract.

    Vox bundle extras

    Where Vox sets itself apart is the add-on ecosystem. Most pure-play ISPs (Webafrica, Afrihost) sell the fibre line and stop there. Vox bolts on a stack of services on the same monthly bill, which is genuinely useful if you'd otherwise juggle three vendors:

    • Vox Voice: SIP voice line over your fibre, useful if you still need a landline number for a business or for elderly parents who don't trust mobile.
    • VoxTV / DStv Stream bundles: IPTV add-ons including local channels, sport and movie tiers.
    • Static IP: R49–R99/month, handy for remote work, security cameras, NAS, port-forwarded gaming servers.
    • Email hosting + business plans: Vox is the largest SMB ISP in SA, so the business tier is well featured. Hosted Exchange, Microsoft 365 reselling, domain hosting.
    • VoxNet mesh: managed mesh WiFi for larger homes and offices.
    • Failover SIM: bonded LTE/5G as a backup for fibre downtime, important for businesses on always-on workflows.

    Vox vs Webafrica vs Afrihost

    Vox sits in the upper-mid tier on price, usually R30–R60 above Webafrica or Afrihost on equivalent speeds. You're paying for the bundle ecosystem (voice, TV, business support) and a strong support team that's been doing this for over two decades.

    Quick comparison at the popular 100 Mbps tier:

    • Webafrica 100 Mbps: ~R867/month, leanest pricing, app-first.
    • Afrihost 100 Mbps: ~R867/month, strong client zone, ticket support.
    • MWeb 100 Mbps: ~R867–R899/month, phone support, free router.
    • Vox 100 Mbps: ~R899/month, bundle ecosystem, business focus.

    If you want pure uncapped fibre with no extras, Webafrica or Afrihost usually win on raw price. If you want voice + TV + fibre + business email on one bill, Vox is hard to beat. Compare in our best fibre ISP ranking.

    Vox WiFi deals

    "Vox WiFi" is shorthand for Vox fibre delivered via a WiFi router, same product, just packaged with the router. All Vox fibre packages include a free Vox-branded WiFi router on 24-month contracts. Month-to-month customers can buy the router for R699–R1 199 once-off.

    The router is typically a dual-band AC1200 or AX1500 unit with gigabit LAN ports, fine for most three-bedroom homes. For larger homes (300m²+ or double-storey), Vox's VoxNet mesh upgrade is well worth it, meshes cost R200–R400/month rental and dramatically improve coverage compared to a single router.

    Looking for live deals? See our Vox fibre deals page.

    Best Vox fibre for business

    Vox is one of the few SA ISPs with a real SMB and enterprise track record. If you run a business from home or operate a small office, Vox's business tier brings extras that Webafrica and Afrihost don't:

    • SLA-backed uptime: 99% / 99.5% with credit-back if breached.
    • Static IPs & subnets: for VPN, mail servers, CCTV.
    • Failover bonding: bond fibre + LTE so the office stays online.
    • Hosted PBX: full cloud phone system on the same bill.
    • Dedicated account manager on larger plans.

    For pure home use you don't need any of this, but it's worth knowing if you're stepping up to a serious work-from-home setup.

    Which network should I pick on Vox?

    Vox is FNO-agnostic, the experience inside your home is identical regardless of which network carries the line. Pick by what's at your address:

    • Vumatel: best for Joburg suburbs, symmetrical Vuma Core for upload-heavy work.
    • Openserve: widest national footprint, strong in Pretoria and smaller towns.
    • Frogfoot: best latency, popular with remote workers in Cape Town.
    • Octotel: Cape Town–first network, good gigabit pricing.
    • MetroFibre: Gauteng/KZN, well-priced mid-tier.

    Use our fibre in my area tool to see every network at your address before signing up.

    Frequently asked questions

    From R459/month for 10 Mbps uncapped, up to around R1 549/month for 1 Gbps. Most homes pay R599–R899/month.

    Yes, every Vox fibre package is fully uncapped, unshaped and unthrottled.

    Yes, on 24-month contracts. Month-to-month plans charge R699–R1 199 once-off for the router.

    Openserve, Vumatel, Frogfoot, Octotel and MetroFibre, all major SA fibre networks.

    Yes. Vox is the largest SMB ISP in SA, with strong support, static IPs, hosted PBX, failover bonding and SLA-backed uptime tiers.

    Vox Voice is sold as an add-on, typically R49–R149/month for the line, plus per-minute rates. Useful for businesses that need a fixed number.

    Both 24-month and month-to-month options are available. The 24-month plan typically waives setup and gives a free router.
    Last reviewed by the Fastest Fibre editorial team.

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    Disclaimer: FastestFibre.co.za is an independent comparison and information service. We do not own any fibre network, and we do not sell internet packages directly. Pricing, speeds and availability shown on this site are indicative and may change without notice; final pricing, terms and contractual obligations are set by the individual ISPs and fibre network operators.

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