I feel like every two years I need to call my carrier and complain if I want a decent deal. They will do things like upgrade my plan on their website to have 10 extra gigabytes of data but won’t upgrade me to it until I contact them. There’s also all the new member exclusive deals that I feel make it impractical to just sit on one plan for an extended period of time.

  • @janNatan@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    Nope. I live in Tennessee and use Cricket Mobile. Admittedly I don’t have children/family whose phones I pay for, which means I can avoid a family plan. That simplifies things. My husband also uses Cricket. $30/mo each (no extra taxes) thanks to using auto pay. (It would be $35 otherwise.) Unlimited calls/texts and 5GB data. That’s very low, but I have WiFi at home and the office, so I hardly use mobile data other than for GPS. Cricket uses AT&T’s towers, which have made great strides in cell service in rural Tennessee since I fist tried them a decade ago.

    This reads like an ad, and I’m sorry for that. But, you should try this out if you can, fellow Americans.

    One downside is that I don’t get free phones routinely as a plan would allow. But my phone was like $150-$180 and I’ve had it for… 2 or 3 years? Can’t remember. That is like an additional $6/month-ish.

    • federalreverse-old
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      4 months ago

      Unlimited calls/texts and 5GB in Germany is currently around 8,99€/28d on prepaid (incl. VAT). Yet Germany is one of the more expensive countries in the EU. Prepaid plans from most other EU countries would likely not be cheaper but include more data. E.g. 3 Austria has a postpaid plan for 12,99€/m that includes 40 GB of data and unlimited calls/texts (that’s randomly the first provider I looked at).

      Back in Germany, you can also get super-expensive postpaid plans with a device included of course. Economically, for private users that usually makes no sense though. These plans are often used for corporate phones or by people who want bragging rights.

      (On the flip side, I guess the pricing pressure may be part of what apparently drives telecom companies to outsource even more of their business functions here than they do in the US.)