Bonded Broadband: Combining Connections for Business Resilience
Bond two or more broadband lines into one resilient, higher-speed connection. AMVIA supplies, installs, and manages bonded broadband for UK businesses where a leased line is unavailable or cost-prohibitive — providing meaningful uptime improvement at a fraction of the dedicated circuit price.
Resilience Without Leased Line Cost
Bonded broadband aggregates two separate internet lines — using load balancing or channel bonding — to improve throughput and provide automatic failover. If one line drops, traffic continues over the other with minimal disruption. It is a practical resilience option for businesses that depend on connectivity but operate in areas where dedicated leased lines are expensive or not yet available.
Explore all connectivity solutionsUnderstanding the Connectivity Resilience Gap
Standard business broadband — whether FTTC or FTTP — runs over a shared infrastructure. A single point of failure in the local loop, exchange equipment, or provider's network can take your connectivity offline. For businesses running cloud applications, VoIP phone systems, or remote access tools, this represents genuine operational risk.
A leased line eliminates most of these risks through dedicated infrastructure and SLA-backed fix times. But leased line pricing can be significantly higher than broadband, and availability is limited in rural and semi-rural areas. Bonded broadband occupies the middle ground: meaningfully more resilient than a single line, at a cost that most SMEs can justify.
How Bonded Broadband Delivers Resilience
The key mechanism is path diversity. By sourcing two circuits — ideally from different providers and via different physical routes where possible — you remove the single-point-of-failure risk. A bonding router at your premises manages traffic across both lines. If one line fails, traffic switches automatically to the surviving line.
The speed of failover depends on the bonding technology. Load-balanced configurations typically detect failure within seconds and reroute traffic. Channel-bonded implementations can maintain active sessions — including VoIP calls — across a failover event in many cases.
Bandwidth Aggregation
Beyond resilience, bonding provides additional aggregate bandwidth. Two 80/20Mbps FTTC lines can deliver up to 160Mbps download and 40Mbps upload in a load-balanced configuration. For businesses approaching the capacity of a single line — common where cloud backup, video conferencing, and cloud storage all compete for bandwidth — this can meaningfully improve day-to-day performance.
AMVIA advises on realistic expected speeds based on your postcode and available line types during a pre-sales assessment. Line quality varies by location, and actual throughput in channel-bonding configurations depends on the bonding hardware and the consistency of the underlying circuits.
Use Cases Best Suited to Bonded Broadband
Bonded broadband is typically deployed where one or more of the following apply: the business has experienced broadband outages in the past 12 months; a leased line is available but cost is a constraint; full-fibre is not yet available at the premises; or the business uses VoIP, cloud backup, or real-time cloud applications that are sensitive to connectivity interruption.
It is also a common transitional solution — deployed whilst a leased line or FTTP upgrade is on order or scheduled, providing interim resilience during what can be a lengthy provisioning period.
AMVIA's Managed Service
AMVIA sources and installs both lines, manages all carrier coordination, and configures the bonding hardware at your premises. Both circuits are monitored via AmviaIQ. If either line degrades or fails, AMVIA detects the fault and opens a carrier restoration ticket on your behalf.
You receive a single invoice and a single support number — AMVIA manages the complexity of dealing with multiple carriers so you do not have to. Monthly reports confirm circuit availability and flag any performance trends.
Migration and Upgrade Paths
If a leased line becomes available at your site, or your business grows to justify the additional investment, AMVIA manages the migration from bonded broadband to a dedicated circuit. The transition is planned to minimise downtime, typically running the new circuit in parallel before cutting over.
Where FTTP full fibre becomes available, AMVIA can upgrade one or both of the bonded lines to full-fibre circuits, improving both the quality and the resilience of the underlying infrastructure without changing the bonded configuration.
AMVIA Bonded Broadband: What's Included
Full service from line procurement to ongoing monitoring and fault management.
Dual-Line Procurement
AMVIA sources both circuits, handling all carrier negotiations and order management.
Bonding Hardware Configuration
Professional installation and configuration of bonding router at your premises.
Continuous Circuit Monitoring
Both lines monitored via AmviaIQ — availability, latency, and throughput tracked 24/7.
Carrier Fault Management
AMVIA opens and manages restoration tickets with carriers — you get a single point of contact.
Upgrade Path Management
Seamless migration to leased line or FTTP when available and appropriate.
QoS Configuration
Quality of service settings prioritise VoIP and business-critical traffic on both circuits.
Bonded Broadband: When It Makes Sense
Use this checklist to evaluate whether bonded broadband is appropriate for your business.
Connectivity outages in past 12 months
Any history of line downtime indicates single-line risk that bonding directly addresses.
VoIP or cloud telephony in use
Business phone systems over IP require reliable connectivity — bonding reduces disruption risk.
Leased line cost is a barrier
Bonding provides resilience at significantly lower cost than a dedicated leased line.
FTTP not yet available at your premises
Bonding FTTC lines provides interim resilience while full-fibre rollout reaches your area.
Single line approaching capacity
If peak-hour slowdowns affect productivity, bonding increases available aggregate bandwidth.
Remote access critical to operations
Staff connecting to the office VPN or cloud tools require reliable outbound connectivity.
Bonded Broadband FAQs
Not to the same level. A leased line uses dedicated infrastructure with contractual SLA fix times — typically 99.9% availability with a defined response commitment. Bonded broadband uses shared broadband infrastructure and does not carry the same SLA. However, it provides substantially better resilience than a single broadband line, and for most SMEs represents a practical and cost-effective improvement.
If both circuits fail simultaneously — for example during a widespread power outage or a major exchange fault affecting both carriers — the bonded connection will also be unavailable. AMVIA advises clients in high-availability environments to source the two circuits from different physical exchanges or providers to reduce the likelihood of a simultaneous failure.
Provisioning two lines typically takes two to four weeks. AMVIA orders both circuits simultaneously to minimise lead time. The bonding hardware is installed once both lines are active. If one line is already in place, AMVIA can add a second circuit to your existing infrastructure.
Yes. Bonding different circuit types is common and can be advantageous — FTTP provides better base performance, and adding an FTTC line provides a resilience path at lower cost than a second FTTP circuit. AMVIA will advise on the best combination for your location and requirements.
Improve Your Business Connectivity Resilience
AMVIA will assess your current connection, check line availability at your site, and recommend the right bonded broadband configuration for your business.
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