Depending on the NBN service (ie. Enterprise Ethernet, etc), there may be different grades to the service.
The key difference between Standard Grade and Premium Grade lies in performance, support response, and operational assurance — especially in terms of service uptime, availability, and restoration times.
Here’s a clear breakdown:
1. Support Availability and Response SLA
Table (Header Row)
Feature | Standard Grade | Premium Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Support Hours | Business hours only (Mon–Fri, typically 8am–5pm) | 24/7/365 |
| Target Fault Restoration Time | 12 hours (during business hours) | 4 hours (24/7 including weekends/public holidays) |
| Proactive Fault Notification | Not guaranteed | Yes – included |
2. Assurance and SLA Commitment
Table (Header Row)
Feature | Standard Grade | Premium Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Availability SLA | Typically lower (e.g. ~99.5%) | Higher uptime guarantee (e.g. 99.95%) |
| Enhanced Service Assurance | No | Yes – with escalated restoration and priority queues |
| Business Continuity Focus | Suitable for basic operations | Designed for mission-critical environments |
3. Use Case Suitability
Table (Header Row)
Use Case | Standard Grade | Premium Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Office Internet | ✅ Good | ✅ Overkill unless uptime is crucial |
| Cloud apps / VoIP / light usage | ✅ Suitable | ✅ Better for real-time performance |
| Financial, healthcare, always-on services | ⚠️ Risky | ✅ Strongly recommended |
Summary
Table (Header Row)
Feature Area | Standard Grade | Premium Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Response & Restore | Best effort / business hours | Priority / 24x7 / 4-hour restore SLA |
| SLA Availability | Lower | Higher |
| Fault Management | Reactive | Proactive & Priority |
| Ideal For | Non-critical internet access | Mission-critical services |