Customers of Orange and T-Mobile will soon be able to hop between the two mobile networks.
The deal is one of the first practical benefits from the recent merger of the two firms, which have 30 million customers combined.
The network sharing deal is limited to 2G signals, so customers will see little benefit when using the mobile web.
Analysts said that T-Mobile had the most to gain from the merger.
“Outside of the South-East of England there has been a constant perception that T-Mobile is an underperforming network,” said Shaun Collins of research firm CCS Insight. “This deal literally takes it away overnight.”
He said that network coverage was becoming a “key battleground” between the major UK networks.
“The network coverage advantages of the merger [between Orange and T-Mobile] were always the most important part of it,” he said.
Customers of the two firms will have to sign up for the free “roaming” service, which goes live on 5 October. Once registered, their phone will automatically hop between the networks when it loses signal. The underlying system is similar to that used when a phone “roams” on a different network abroad.
Next year Everything Everywhere – the company that runs Orange and T-Mobile in the UK – said that phones would automatically switch to whichever of the two networks has the strongest signal mid-call.
It said it also plans to roll it out to 3G services.
Source: BBC Tech News

