e& UAE has launched Fibre+, an upgraded home broadband service that bundles high-speed fibre connections with enhanced entertainment and gaming features. Announced in Dubai on 13 May 2026, the offering builds directly on the country’s already extensive fibre network, which covers nearly the entire population and consistently ranks among the world’s strongest.
At its core, Fibre+ promises consistent multi-gigabit performance and low latency across the home. The standout technical addition is Fibre-to-the-Room (FTTR), which extends fibre cabling into individual rooms rather than stopping at a central point. This approach aims to reduce dead zones and maintain stability for demanding uses such as 8K streaming, competitive online gaming, or extended reality applications. In practice, it addresses a common frustration in multi-device households where Wi-Fi signals weaken with distance or walls.
Customers on qualifying eLife Ultra Starter, Neo, or Neo Fusion plans will also receive a Wi-Fi 7 router. The latest standard improves handling of simultaneous connections, offering better coverage and responsiveness without complex setup. e& UAE remotely manages these routers, simplifying troubleshooting for users. Real-world wired speeds on a 1 Gbps plan typically reach 900–940 Mbps, while higher tiers of 5 Gbps and 10 Gbps deliver closer to their advertised figures under optimal Ethernet conditions.
Marwan Bin Shakar, chief technology officer at e& UAE, described the service as meeting modern homes’ need for resilient connectivity that supports work, learning, and leisure. The upgrade arrives as households continue layering more devices and higher-resolution content onto their networks. Yet it remains an evolution of infrastructure already in place rather than a complete reinvention. The UAE’s fibre-to-the-home penetration sits at roughly 99.7 percent, placing it ahead of South Korea and China according to FTTH Council data. This long-term investment in national broadband has given operators a solid foundation to iterate quickly.
For existing e& UAE home customers with compatible equipment and the right plans, Fibre+ benefits activate automatically. That seamless transition is practical, though availability still hinges on specific subscriptions. In a market where ultra-fast broadband is increasingly table stakes, the real test will be sustained performance during peak evening hours when entire families stream, game, and work simultaneously. Past generations of home internet often delivered strong headline speeds but struggled with reliability once multiple high-bandwidth activities overlapped.
Overall, Fibre+ reflects the UAE’s ongoing push to stay at the forefront of digital infrastructure. It offers tangible improvements in coverage and device handling for power users, yet it also highlights how expectations have risen in lockstep with capability. As more households adopt 8K displays, cloud gaming, and immersive tech, services like this will need to prove they deliver consistent value beyond marketing claims. In that sense, e& UAE’s latest step is less a revolution than a necessary refinement of an already advanced network.
