![]() Monthly price: $290-$310 (including taxes & fees). I’ll reveal our plan and how much we pay (or paid) for our cell phone plan.ĪT&T: 15GB shared data, 4 lines, unlimited text and talk. This week, I got $15 off a Lyft ride, 25% off and free shipping from, free digital subscription to WIRED, and a free small frosty from Wendy’s. Last week I was given $15 off of a Lyft ride, free snack-size wings from Buffalo Wild Wings, and some other nonsense. Every Tuesday T-Mobile gives their customers either free shit or highly discounted deals. In fact, thanks to him we were able to Uber around all of San Jose. Earlier this month my friends and I went to Costa Rica and my friend who had T-Mobile used his phone nearly everywhere. I even went on a road-trip this past weekend through Pennsylvania and only lost reception twice (each for less than 5 minutes) through small isolated highway spots.Īside from having unlimited EVERYTHING, which I don’t think I’ve had since the release of the iPhone 4, I really really really like the unlimited free data abroad. I’ve noticed no difference in reliability or speed between AT&T and T-Mobile. ![]() For example, if you add four (4) lines it would be about $40 a line ($35/line if you sign up for autopay). The plan is really only worth it if you have a family plan because it makes it even cheaper. T-Mobile ONE offers unlimited 4G LTE, text, and talk, unlimited steaming of music and video, unlimited text and data in 140+ countries, unlimited hot-spot (tethering, including abroad), and 1hr free of GOGO in-flight internet plus unlimited inflight text, messaging (what’s app, fb messenger, imessage, groupme, etc…). T-Mobile’s LTE is thought to be faster than AT&T’s and according to T-Mobile, they cover 99.7% of Verizon customers.Įarlier this month, T-Mobile announced their new plan, T-Mobile ONE. I know T-Mobile is considered to be inferior to AT&T and Verizon, but the reality is, that it is more comparable than not. ![]() I will say, they were more sold on it than I was and I was the one trying to convince them. However, after 16 years and thousands of dollars spent on AT&T, I was able to convince my parents to switch to T-Mobile. We’ve always enjoyed AT&T, reception, especially in Miami, was always reliable and the speeds were usually better than the competitors. Once I turned 16 (nearly ten years ago), I was added to their plan and got my first Blackberry. Anyway, since August 2000 my parents have been loyal customers of AT&T, Bellsouth, Cingular, you name it. They ended up with some Motorola or Nokia type of phone that was rather large in size compared to phones nowadays (though some are getting bigger but thinner). I still remember being forced to go to AT&T back in August 2000 because my parents wanted to sign up for cell service. Free cell phone plan? Yes please! Oh, and by the way, I have not been asked or paid by T-Mobile to make this post. I’m not ashamed to say that I’m a 25 year old who is still on his parents family plan. T-Mobile ONE… why we switched from AT&T after 16 years.
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