Anyone give up cable and tradition cell phone providers?

Verizon is about the only reliable cell phone service we have where I live.

I didn't expect that being so close to Atlanta but have tried several others and we can't even get service at our house for 2 of them.
So we'll be keeping Verizon.

And my husband said he won't give up Directv unless we are in dire straights because he *must* have it.

So I just budget for all of that knowing there isn't much I can do about reducing those costs right now.

You do what you can, you know? Some people have told me if I want to save money I should stop going to Disney. LOL.....no.

BTW, Verizon does have some prepaid plans, so maybe that is an option?
 
I haven't had a cell phone in about 10 years and I don't see why it's a necessity. :confused3

Do you leave your house much? Do you drive? What if you break down somewhere, how do you call for assistance? There was a time when a cell phone was a luxury, but not anymore. Now it is assumed that you will have one, and because of that some things like pay phones, which made it possible to not have a cell phone before, have disappeared from the landscape. Cell phones are similar to insurance. If you never have to use it, it seems like a waste of money, but if you ever need it, you'll be glad you have it. This is not to say that you need to have a contract and a monthly service plan. A prepaid plan is fine for some, but I do think at least a basic cell phone is a necessity.

Now, we do have smartphones, but I am not your average user. I see the smartphone as my "everything" appliance. I can listen to music on it, I can surf the web on it, I can use it as a wifi host for my laptop, I can use it as a GPS in my car, etc. For everyting that I use it for, it is well worth the $140 a month I pay for it. I did unfortunately just have to add $10 a month to add an additional phone line that we do not need. But it was the only way to upgrade DW's phone and keep our unlimited access.
 
Not had cable for many yrs, never missed it. We do have cable internet an phone. Our cell phones are Trac phones my trac phone if very hard to add mins to it for some reason last time mins was added was 2 yrs ago Dh had such a hard time that trac phone made the mins good till 2032 LOL. NO I do not use my cell phone much use for emergencies an very short calls with DH when we go to disney. Still got over 300 mins on the phone.
 
We would give up cable tv in a second, but DH is a sports fanatic. If he could still watch his football games, we would drop everything. I hate paying the cable bill most of all. It seems like such a waste of $$.
 

We have not had a land line in over 7 years. We have a blast package from Comcast for 39.99 for two years which is high speed Internet and limited basic. We also have on demand, Netflix and amazon prime. 39.99 a year for amazon prime as I have a student account. 7.99 a month for Netflix. We have a roku on our bedroom tv to access Netflix in there. Our cells are iPhones with data planes so they are 139.00 a month for both phones.

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What does the Comcast blast package include? Just internet and limited basic cable? Which channels do you get? Right now out phone/internet/cable bill is $202/month. If we could get rid of phone and lower out cable/internet bill that would be super cool. As long as DH has his football, we are good.
 
We bought an Ooma a couple years ago on clearance for $130 [they were $99 BF this year by the way] for our home phone. With 3 kids, wanted land line. We pay $3.25 in tax per month. I had to pay $40 to keep phone number. Took 1 year to break even and now we love not having the $25+ home phone bill. Our Savings is about $22 per month or $264 per month.

We use amazon prime and netflix. Amazon prime has added benefit of free kindle book library and free 2 day shipping in addition to the prime shows and movies. $80 year works out to about $6.67 per month. Netflix is $7.99 per month. And we have regular tv [HD too] FREE.

Our Cable Bill was close to $100 so t hat's a savings of $85 per MONTH or $1020 per year.

I use VirginMobile $25 month plan [27.25 after tax]; DH's plan is free and our DD13 has Platinumtel. I paid $100 for a service card and got a free phone. Worked out to about $10 per month for all her texting, etc.

So our cell phone bill is about $35 per month. Many of my friends pay well over $60 just for themselves and about $20 for a kid. So we save about $40 month or $480 per year by being frugal in this category.

Internet we pay $20 per month through Comcast. $240 per year. We have to call and get the $20 rate every now and again.

Our savings = close to $2000 per year.

The kids miss the current disney shows; I miss my bravo trash tv and HGTV but really overall....we are better off without it and that's a vacation right there.

Trish
 
Many games are of course on regular tv

but you can also watch ESPN 3 for games as well. You can hook to tv from computer even.

We all watch less tv now and frankly that's a nice side effect. But we do play with our tablets, etc. more. LOL.

Trish
 
We gave up cable 10 months ago. We have roku and use Hulu and amazon prime. We do not miss cable. We purchased ooma for home phone 3 months ago. We are also with Ting mobile. We got a referral bonus $50 off each phone. Three smart phones for $132 and our monthly bill I averages a between $35 to $50 for 3 phones. Before we paid $ 85 just for voice only with Sprint. With Ting we still have sprint service but now we can use a smart phone and pay for what we use.
We are saving over $2000 per year and are getting mor bang for our buck.

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Do you leave your house much? Do you drive? What if you break down somewhere, how do you call for assistance? There was a time when a cell phone was a luxury, but not anymore. Now it is assumed that you will have one, and because of that some things like pay phones, which made it possible to not have a cell phone before, have disappeared from the landscape. Cell phones are similar to insurance. If you never have to use it, it seems like a waste of money, but if you ever need it, you'll be glad you have it. This is not to say that you need to have a contract and a monthly service plan. A prepaid plan is fine for some, but I do think at least a basic cell phone is a necessity.

Now, we do have smartphones, but I am not your average user. I see the smartphone as my "everything" appliance. I can listen to music on it, I can surf the web on it, I can use it as a wifi host for my laptop, I can use it as a GPS in my car, etc. For everyting that I use it for, it is well worth the $140 a month I pay for it. I did unfortunately just have to add $10 a month to add an additional phone line that we do not need. But it was the only way to upgrade DW's phone and keep our unlimited access.

I do have a cell phone but I agree with pp that it is a luxury and not a necessity. Pay phones weren't found near where you broke down (when it happened) in the past anyway. Is it less convenient than being able to call from your car where it's broken down? Of course. But I don't think it's a necessity just if you leave your house.

More power to those who hold out against it!
 
I could easily give up cable and a landline, but not internet or cell phones. Like other posters, I consider home internet and cell phones a necessity. That being said, I would only want a phone with minutes and texting. A data plan isn't necessary with home internet.
 
DD went to Walmart and picked an Android Straight Talk cell phone it would have cost $45. for unlimited Data plan card a month. She went online and paid for a year of unlimited Data. It includes talk, text, and online service.

Next year for her cruise, she will buy a Straight Talk International calling card for $60.00. That will also be a unlimited data plan card.
 
We bought a Roku and use it to watch Netflix, hulu, and Amazon streaming on our tv. We get Amazon only because we already need the prime shipping so it's just a bonus. When our contracts were finally up two months ago, we switched from Verizon to straight talk and get just as good of service for less than half the cost. We didn't even have unlimited everything before but we do now. I also buy all the cards by clicking through shopathome.com to get 17% cash back.
 
We have Verizon for our cell phone. We've always been really happy with them but we don't want to spend more then we have to. Has anyone tried cheaper providers like Straight Talk?

Yes, I use Net10's "monthly unlimited", which costs me only $45 a month for pretty much unlimited everything.

The beautiful part of the whole thing is I use Net10's Samsung Galaxy Proclaim, which operates on Verizon's national network, meaning it looks and acts like a Verizon phone, but certainly not priced like one...
 
DD went to Walmart and picked an Android Straight Talk cell phone it would have cost $45. for unlimited Data plan card a month. She went online and paid for a year of unlimited Data. It includes talk, text, and online service.

Always exercise a little caution when using any of the Tracfone family of companies' (Straight Talk and Net10) "unlimited data" plans -- a more realistic data count might be more like 2GB a month, which is more than enough for the casual daily web surfer. In other words, if she's into Netflix and Pandora Radio, I wouldn't suggest doing it on a cellular connection.

Next year for her cruise, she will buy a Straight Talk International calling card for $60.00. That will also be a unlimited data plan card.

Keep in mind, that particular card is meant for callers in the U.S. to make phone calls to certain foreign countries -- I would never, under any circumstances, take a USA-requisitioned cell phone/SIM card aboard any cruise ship (since all cruise ships are registered outside of the USA).
 
Getting rid of cable works best if you can easily get OTA stations and don't need cable to watch sports. Many (most?) MLB teams air most of their games on cable. Obviously not an issue for non-sports fans.

I agree some of the pre-paid cell plans can work well for many people. Read the fine print. You don't generally get unlimited free data. Virgin Mobile will throttle you down if you go a little over 2G for the month. Many of the other prepaid services which claim unlimited data either have specific limits or have terms in their terms on conditions which basically let them shut down customers who use more then their "fair share" sometimes considered more then 1 G.

Examples of prohibited uses under ST service include:

automated text or picture messaging to another mobile device or e-mail address; (iii) uploading, downloading or streaming of audio or video programming or games;

Not an issue for their intended customers but could be an issue for heavy data users looking for an alternative to VZs data pricing.
 
Yes the blast package is limited basic and high speed Internet. We have very good wifi. The limited basic is essentially the same channels we pulled for free with antennae but includes access to xfinity and on demand. We needed wifi to access other technology in the house so this was the most cost effective we could find. It was a online only package (web special) at comcasts website. The phone operators could not offer the package

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Verizon is about the only reliable cell phone service we have where I live.

I didn't expect that being so close to Atlanta but have tried several others and we can't even get service at our house for 2 of them.
So we'll be keeping Verizon.

And my husband said he won't give up Directv unless we are in dire straights because he *must* have it.

So I just budget for all of that knowing there isn't much I can do about reducing those costs right now.

Oh, yes, there is!

While I agree with your husband on the TV thing (IMO, Netflix and Hulu are NOT the "end-all, be-all" they are hyped-up to be on the BB), you do have an option on the cell phone situation.

If you look at one of my PPs in this thread, I am talking about a well-known prepaid phone company that actually uses Verizon's network (for a fraction of the price) on one of their Android phones.

Another phone option is Page Plus, as that carrier makes exclusive use of the Verizon national network.

Hope this helps.
 
Do you leave your house much? Do you drive? What if you break down somewhere, how do you call for assistance? There was a time when a cell phone was a luxury, but not anymore. Now it is assumed that you will have one, and because of that some things like pay phones, which made it possible to not have a cell phone before, have disappeared from the landscape. Cell phones are similar to insurance. If you never have to use it, it seems like a waste of money, but if you ever need it, you'll be glad you have it. This is not to say that you need to have a contract and a monthly service plan. A prepaid plan is fine for some, but I do think at least a basic cell phone is a necessity.

Now, we do have smartphones, but I am not your average user. I see the smartphone as my "everything" appliance. I can listen to music on it, I can surf the web on it, I can use it as a wifi host for my laptop, I can use it as a GPS in my car, etc. For everyting that I use it for, it is well worth the $140 a month I pay for it. I did unfortunately just have to add $10 a month to add an additional phone line that we do not need. But it was the only way to upgrade DW's phone and keep our unlimited access.

I leave my house every day, as I work outside the home. And I have two 4yo kids, and yes, I drive. And no, I don't need a cell phone. There is maybe once or twice a year I wish I had a cell phone, like when I'm running late for work and want to call and let them know, but nope, I don't find that I ever need it. And everyone knows I don't have one, so if I'm not at work when I'm supposed to be, she knows that when I do arrive I will tell her why. If my girls' preschool wants to get in touch, they know where to find me, they know my work and home number. If I don't answer, they have my husband's numbers. When I'm headed out, I leave a number to where I'll be, just like my parents did when I was little. I did have one about 12 - 15 years ago, but the whole reason I got rid of it is because I hated being accessible at all times. I had it for emergencies, while others thought they could call me at all times on it. And I never gave anyone the number, I just couldn't block the number, so when I called them, the number came up. I even used to have my voicemail message say something like "I never check voicemail, so don't bother leaving me a message." lol

It is very nice to be out on my lunch hour and be able to walk without being glued to my phone. It's nice to take my kids to a children's museum and watch them smile and play and get my full attention while so many other kids are begging their parents to pay attention to them as they're on the phone texting or chatting with someone else. I have to say my quality of life went up since getting rid of my phone. If I had an unreliable car then I would probably have one in case of emergencies, but in this day and age, I don't find that it is necessary for anyone, unless of course they live on the road. I am never far from a phone, and the one time I was stranded someplace when I was pregnant, a stranger let me borrow their phone. And that has only happened once in 12 years, which hardly means it is a necessity.

$140/month is $1680 a year, which is a trip to Disney for us. So no, I don't miss it at all. A Cell phone is just not my priority.
 
brymolmom said:
I do have a cell phone but I agree with pp that it is a luxury and not a necessity. Pay phones weren't found near where you broke down (when it happened) in the past anyway. Is it less convenient than being able to call from your car where it's broken down? Of course. But I don't think it's a necessity just if you leave your house.

More power to those who hold out against it!

I think it depends where you live. My nearly brand new car left me stranded on the tollway at 11 pm at night at 35 weeks pregnant and nobody stopped to see if I was okay during the two hours I waited for roadside assistance. Not even the police officer that was patrolling and honestly I would have been scared if they had. We live near Chicago and I will not travel without my cell.

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Getting rid of cable works best if you can easily get OTA stations and don't need cable to watch sports. Many (most?) MLB teams air most of their games on cable. Obviously not an issue for non-sports fans.

Mostly true - the only known exceptions in MLB are selected Saturday afternoon games which airs over local Fox stations (as well as LCS games and the World Series). In that format, you might see your favorite teamNearly everything else is tied-into a contract with a large, regional cable network, such as Fox Sports _____ and Comcast SportsNet, or in the case of "Sunday Night Baseball", ESPN.

I expect this to change dramatically over time, since TBS, a cable network, is getting more MLB games, and the emergence of cable's new NBC Sports Network.
 














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