12 Tips to Cut Your Cell Phone Bill
Why pay more than you have to every month? These tips, tricks, and services can help you save plenty of dough on that monster cell phone bill.
Covering the Basics
1. Find the right plan for you: Carefully review how often and in what ways you use your phone. Ideally, you should do this before signing a cell phone contract, but of course it can be difficult to know exactly how you'll use your phone until you spend time with it every day.If you're already using your phone, take a close look at your plan, examining the calling, messaging, and data options you've chosen. Then scrutinize your usage pattern. Check several months of phone bills to see whether you pay for more minutes and megabytes than you use, or whether you regularly exceed your usage limits.
How much can I save? Let's use a Verizon Wireless plan as an example.
Possible Savings on Monthly Cell Phone Voice Plan (One Example: Verizon Wireless)
USAGE LIMITS | Price per month | Overage fee (per minute) | Cost of using 750 minutes in one month | Savings | Advice |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
450 minutes per month | $39.99 | $0.45 | $135 over your $39.99 monthly fee | You don't have any--and you're paying much more than your monthly fee | Bump up the minutes on your voice plan if you consistently exceed your minutes limit. |
900 minutes per month | $59.99 | $0.45 | $59.99 | $135 versus the 450-minute plan with overage charges | Drop to a lower monthly rate if you would almost never exceed its lower minutes limit. |
2. Trim the fat: Examine your cell phone to see what services you're paying for above and beyond your voice and data plans. Are you paying your carrier for mobile insurance? A GPS service? Roadside assistance? Visual voicemail? Then think about whether you need these extras. In the case of voicemail, for example, your call log shows you the name and number of incoming callers, anyway--and that's free.
How much can I save? This time, let's use AT&T as an example.
Here are a few of the carrier's extra services, and the monthly charge for each:
Monthly Costs of AT&T's Extra Services
AT&T Navigator | $9.99 |
---|---|
AT&T Family Map for iPhone | $9.99 |
AT&T Mobile Insurance | $6.99 |
Smart Limits for Wireless Parental Controls | $4.99 |
Enhanced Voicemail | $1.99 |
Detailed Billing | $1.99 |
Get the Details on Data
3. Go data-free: Kick it old-school style by dropping your data plan altogether. This option may not be available if you've purchased a smartphone that requires a data plan; but for some consumers it's a sensible move.And it is possible: When my iPhone 4 suffered a fatal fall recently, I went back to my elderly flip phone and relied on an iPod Touch for apps and Internet services. When I wanted to check email or browse the Web, it was Wi-Fi only.
My pockets were heavier, in part because I was carrying two devices around, but also because my pockets had more cash in them thanks to my lower monthly bill.
How much can I save? $15 to $50 a month, or more.
4. Go on a data diet: Not ready to opt out of a data plan completely? Try cutting back instead.
Also, find out what apps are claiming most of your bandwidth; the culprits may be obvious ones like Pandora and Netflix, or sneaky ones like Google Maps or free versions of games like Angry Birds that increase your data usage by serving up ads.
How much can I save? $15 to $35 a month, or more.
5. Compress, compress: Having trouble reducing your data usage? Check out Onavo's free iPhone and Android app, called Onavo Extend, which claims to make your data usage up to five times more efficient.
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How much can I save? $15 a month or more.
Shake Things Up
6. Switch carriers: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless are the big four in cell phone service, but they're hardly your only options.How much can I save? Boost Mobile offers an unlimited Android Plan for $55 per month, and an unlimited BlackBerry Plan for $60. (Both of these plans cover unlimited nationwide talk, text, Web access, 411 service, instant messaging, and email.)
In contrast, opting for a similar plan from Sprint, which is one of the only big carriers still offering an unlimited data option, will cost you $99.99 a month for unlimited voice, data, and messaging.
How much can I save? $40 to $45 per month.
Next: Six More Cost-Cutting Tips for Your Cell Phone Bill
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