Tangerine’s NBN plans just got more expensive

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Pictured: Tangerine logo
// Sour news.
Fergus Halliday
May 16, 2025
Icon Time To Read1 min read

Tangerine's NBN plans are a little less tasty this week, with the provider kicking off the expected mid-year wave of NBN price hikes.

The monthly cost of the NBN 25, NBN 50 and the cheaper of the provider's two Fixed Wireless Speedy plans has going up by $2 apiece. Meanwhile, Tangerine's NBN 100 and Fixed Wireless Superspeedy plan has increased by $3 per month. These price changes kick in from today. 

Existing Tangerine customers will be subject to the new price from their next bill but will hang onto any previous discount or promo pricing so the difference should only be a few dollars for as long as the honeymoon pricing sticks around.

The only silver linings here are that the price of Tangerine's NBN 250 plan isn't going up and its NBN 1000 plan is moving in the other direction. All told, Tangerine's fastest NBN option is getting $5 cheaper. You can find these plans below.

This move follows NBN Co's latest review of wholesale pricing, which will nudge the cost it charges internet retailers like Tangerine upwards.

Of course, if you're looking to sign up for any of these Tangerine NBN plans using the widget above, you probably won't end up paying the usual price. New customers who sign up for a Tangerine NBN plans prior to 30 June 2025 will score a discount for the first six months plus a free 3-months of Binge.

The exact size of the savings here varies based on the plan in particular, but for a sense of how Tangerine's new roster compares to the most popular NBN plans in our database this month check out the widget below.

Fergus Halliday
Written by
Fergus Halliday is a journalist and editor for Reviews.org. He’s written about technology, telecommunications, gaming and more for over a decade. He got his start writing in high school and began his full-time career as the Editor of PC World Australia. Fergus has made the MCV 30 Under 30 list, been a finalist for seven categories at the IT Journalism Awards and won Most Controversial Writer at the 2022 Consensus Awards. He has been published in Gizmodo, Kotaku, GamesHub, Press Start, Screen Rant, Superjump, Nestegg and more.