Virgin Media
Virgin Media is a UK-based telecommunications provider delivering fixed-line broadband, television, mobile, and voice services to residential and business customers over its cable and fibre networks.
- Fixed-line broadband over cable and fibre access networks for consumers and businesses
- Pay TV services including linear channels, on-demand content, and set-top box platforms
- Mobile services using 4G and 5G (mobile connectivity) with bundled converged packages
- Fixed-line voice and SIP-based telephony services for home and business use
- Enterprise connectivity and wholesale network services using Data over Cable Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS) and fibre (network infrastructure)
More About Virgin Media
Virgin Media operates as a converged telecommunications and media provider, supplying broadband internet, pay television, mobile, and fixed-line voice services over its hybrid fibre-coaxial and fibre access infrastructure in the United Kingdom. For enterprise technical stakeholders, the company functions as both a network access provider and a managed services partner, with offerings that can integrate into corporate Wide Area Network (WAN), branch connectivity, and multi-site networking strategies.
The company’s broadband portfolio (network connectivity) is built primarily on a hybrid fibre-coaxial architecture using DOCSIS cable modem technology, alongside fibre-to-the-premises deployments in some areas. This allows enterprise customers, small and medium businesses, and distributed retail or services organisations to procure fixed access lines that can be incorporated into Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS), Software-Defined Wide Area Network (SD-WAN), or Virtual Private Network (VPN) overlays managed either in-house or by third parties. Its network supports IPv4 and IPv6 routing, standard Ethernet handoffs, and integration with Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) such as business routers, firewalls, and unified communications gateways.
Virgin Media’s television services (media distribution) are delivered via digital cable set-top boxes and IP-based delivery models, packaging linear channels, on-demand libraries, and access to streaming applications. In commercial environments such as hospitality, offices, and public venues, these TV solutions can support customer-facing screens, employee information channels, or lobby and reception entertainment, often integrated with structured cabling and internal IP video distribution systems.
The mobile service line (mobile connectivity) utilises 4G and 5G radio access, combined with bundled tariffs that can be packaged with fixed broadband and TV under converged offerings. For enterprises, this enables employee mobile subscriptions, data plans, and remote access use cases that can complement fixed-site connectivity. The mobile network is typically integrated with standard mobile device management, VPN clients, and corporate security policies, using common protocols such as Long Term Evolution (LTE), 5G 5G New Radio (NR), and IPsec-based secure tunnels for access back to corporate resources.
Virgin Media also provides business-focused connectivity and wholesale services (network infrastructure), including fibre-based Ethernet access, leased lines, and backhaul services. These offerings are intended for organisations that require higher-capacity or dedicated connectivity, such as data centres, campuses, and multi-tenant office buildings. Enterprise architects commonly position such services as underlay transport for SD-WAN deployments, cloud access to major Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) providers, and interconnection between core network nodes or key operational sites.
In marketplace and directory taxonomies, Virgin Media is typically categorised under fixed broadband (network connectivity), pay TV (media distribution), mobile network services (mobile connectivity), and enterprise and wholesale network services (network infrastructure). Its portfolio supports use cases spanning residential access, small and medium business connectivity, branch office networking, and media delivery, with integrations based on standard IP networking, DOCSIS, Ethernet, and carrier-grade telephony protocols such as Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP).