One of the challenges that cell phone service providers face is that it costs far more to maintain accounts and service access for folks who rarely use their phone than it costs to actually provide the service that they do use. So for such customers, the vast majority of the price they pay is effectively overhead. It's very hard to make overhead seem worthwhile to consumers. As a result, they pump up the perceived value of the most basic plans, by having even smaller plans have way more minutes than folks who rarely use their phone would ever use. Even cglaura's basic plan, which probably is among the lowest cost services available, effectively includes 50 minutes of talk time per month. That's about twice as much as I'd ever use.
These free phones really burn me up. I'd love to have cell phones for my family, but we don't because we can't afford them. But everyone around me collecting government assistance has cell phones for nothing.For those that fit the program I just picked up from Safelink a tracfone, with several types of plans. Ours is the 250 free a month, there is a 150 rollover.
But they are free.
If you receive fuel assistance, school lunch programs, food stamps, ssdi, etc.
I think ASSURE is another such program.
It was announced about an hour ago that AT&T has bought T-Mobile. I don't have any info on whether there's going to be a price change or anything, but I thought I'd give a heads up.
Must go Google......Something to consider-how about dropping your home phone line and just using a cell? It will save you money in the long run to do that. If you don't use your cell often you can have your home phone number transfered to your cell phone and just use that.
What!?Must go Google......