Two of the UK's biggest telecoms giants have confirmed plans to merge in a move that will create the biggest rival to British Telecoms.
Virgin Media and O2 are set to join forces, affecting around 40million UK households.
Liberty Global and Telefonica - the owners of Virgin Media and O2 respectively - confirmed on Monday that they were in discussions over a possible takeover.
The tie-up between the two companies will create a major rival for BT, which bought EE in 2016, the UK's second largest mobile network.
It will bring together O2's 34million customers on its mobile network with Virgin's 5.3million broadband, pay-TV and mobile users.
The deal, which is expected to close in the middle of 2021 subject to regulatory approvals, values Virgin Media at £18.7billion and O2 at £12.7billion.
In a statement, they said they will create a "full converged platform" for customers and will invest £10 billion in the UK over the next five years.
The 50-50 joint venture will deliver £6.2 billion worth of cost-saving synergies, the pair said.
Mike Fries, chief executive officer of Liberty Global, said: "We couldn't be more excited about this combination.
"Virgin Media has redefined broadband and entertainment in the UK with lightning-fast speeds and the most innovative video platform. And O2 is widely recognised as the most reliable and admired mobile operator in the UK, always putting the customer first."
O2 - which also provides the network for GiffGaff, Tesco Mobile and Sky Mobile - is the UK's largest phone company.
Jose Maria Alvarez-Pallete, chief executive of Telefonica, said: "Combining O2's number one mobile business with Virgin Media's superfast broadband network and entertainment services will be a game-changer in the UK, at a time when demand for connectivity has never been greater or more critical.
"We are creating a strong competitor with significant scale and financial strength to invest in UK digital infrastructure and give millions of consumer, business and public sector customers more choice and value."