Verizon Wireless Offers More Data for More Money
First, the good news: Verizon is changing each of its data plans so that they will offer at least 30 percent more data than before. Now the bad news: Verizon Wireless customers who opt for the new plans will pay more. Here’s what the differences will be for each of the company’s plans:
- Small: Data allowance doubles from 1 to 2 GB; price increases from $30 to $35 per month.
- Medium: Data allowance jumps from 3 to 4 GB; price goes up from $45 to $50 per month.
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Large: Data allowance goes from 6 to 8 GB; price rises from $60 to $70 per month.
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X-Large: Data allowance grows from 12 to 16 GB; price increases from $80 to $90 per month.
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XX-Large: Data allowance climbs from 18 to 24 GB; price inches up from $100 to $110 per month.
Verizon is also matching competing carriers by introducing rollover data on all of its plans, a feature called Carryover Data. As with AT&T Rollover Data feature, unused data rolls over only one billing cycle before expiring. T-Mobile, in contrast, lets you accumulate rollover data for up to 12 months.
Also, Verizon offers a new feature, called Safety Mode, that prevents $15 per GB overage charges by instead throttling data throughput to 128 Kbps after you run through your monthly allotment. Verizon’s XL and XXL plans will include this feature for free, but for others, it will cost an additional $5 per month.
The XL and XXL plans also include unlimited calling to Mexico and Canada, along with voice, text, and data while in those countries. For those on the S, M, and L plans, unlimited calling to Mexico and Canada costs $5 per month and getting talk, text, and data while in Mexico and Canada requires a $2-per-day Travel Pass plan.
Overall, these are decent changes, certainly better than straight price increases. However, if you’re not thrilled with the new plans, Verizon says that you can keep your existing plan for now.
One very frustrating bug in Verizon's "TravelPass" feature is that if you live and/or travel anywhere in the U.S. near the Canadian border (as I do), the $2/day feature kicks in. And, even more frustrating, if you call when it happens and ask Verizon to turn it OFF, it continues to trigger each day you continue to travel near the boarder.
That is annoying! I've always wondered how cell phone systems worked around borders, given that the signals don't respect the boundaries.
I pay $35/mo for Cricket Wireless on the AT&T network. 2.5 GB data and unlimited talk and text. No contract.
Vastly more people use Verizon and might either wish to switch or want to be careful to hold on to an older plan.
I'd love that, but AT&T doesn't have a cellular network in my town.