http://finance.yahoo.com/news/veriz...ore-deals-to-its-own-customers-171303274.html
I just saved $10 a month.
I just saved $10 a month.
I recently lowered my Verizon rate substantially by switching to T-Mobile.
Exactly. I switched from AT&T and am saving a bundle every month, and have no long term agreement (will never sign one of those again). Remarkably, customer service is much better with T-Mobile as well. And I now get free slow data when abroad. Amazing, more for less...
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Her husband is frugal, but sometimes can't see the forest for the trees. You're lucky to have such a good experience. In my area, Verizon has coverage everywhere, but T-Mobile is sketchy at best.
I have Verizon and hubby has T-Mobile. We both have iPhones. He does have international service in some areas. Recently, he had it in Barbados but not in the Bahamas. I have no international. However, I don't have to pay full retail for an iPhone. And I have more coverage, phone and internet and stronger signal strength most of the time. He's content given the price he pays. Don't think I would be given how often I like to get a new phone.
You may check pricing and availability of T-Mobile service in other countries here:
http://www.t-mobile.com/optional-services/roaming.html
As for "pay full retail for an iPhone" don't kid yourself. You're paying for the phone one way or another, either up front or over time. As for upgrades, I've sold my old iPhone and bought new, and suspect that's what I'll do when there's a worthwhile upgrade available again.
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Yes, you're right. It's a psychological marketing trick that allows me to get the new phone every two years not having to put nearly $900 on my credit card at once or sign to make new installments. I think I'm just signing to renew a contract at what I've been paying for my plan for a very long time which in reality is more than T-Mobile's service. A savings which would cover the cost of the phone. However, there's still the fact that I prefer having service. And so far, except for international, I have it more often than he. When, if, T-Mobile's coverage and signal/internet strength equals or surpasses that of Verizon I might consider it. I suspect by then, Verizon will become more competitive in pricing.
Any cost difference is more than justified.
I went to T-mobile because we are about to go to Europe for a year, and the free texting and free but slow data while roaming and 20 cent-per-minute roaming and free-calls-when-on-wifi had a lot to do with that choice.
But otherwise, not being a phone phanatic, I'd look seriously at republic wireless or ting or Wal-mart's offerings.
I think I could have written this post.
We have Verizon as they supposedly have the best coverage where we are. Just completed a two year contract and most likely will go into another contract when we decide to upgrade (waiting for the Samsung Galaxy 6 to come out in a couple of months).
I could change the rate plan and save $10/month, but I would lose our current plan. Since I'm not sure if that is a good or bad thing, I'm doing nothing. I did reduce out bill by dropping one dd (she got married) and decreasing our data since we were coming nowhere close to what we were paying for.
Based off the advice on this thread, we called Verizon and asked them to review our bill and get it down as cheap as possible. We ended up with the MORE unlimited talk (used to be 700 min) and 10GB of data (an increase of 4GB) and our recent bill that came yesterday showed a price drop to $205 for us. That's a savings of $60/month.
Thanks!
Hey, that's enough savings to pay for another timeshare MF!![]()