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AT&T Alters Terms of Wireless Early Termination Fees

On Monday AT&T announced a new plan for early termination fees starting on May 25th. Each month of the one or two-year contract, the termination fee will be lowered by US$5.00. AT&T also reiterated the ways customers can avoid long-term contracts and early termination fees altogether.

"Beginning on May 25, the company's new and renewing wireless customers who enter into one- or two-year service agreements will no longer be required to pay a single, flat early termination fee. Instead, that fee, which is $175, will be progressively lowered by $5 during each month, every month, for the term of the contract. (The single, flat ETF will continue to apply to new and renewing customers who enter into one- or two-year service agreements prior to May 25.)," AT&T said.

The company reiterated the ways customers can avoid long term contracts and early termination fees:

  • Buy a phone at full price and go on a month-to-month service plan.
  • Bring your own compatible GSM device. With this option, you can buy a SIM (subscriber identity module), slip it into the back of the phone, and select a month-to-month service plan.
  • Choose one of AT&T's GoPhone prepaid wireless plans.

Even over 24 months, the early termination fee doesn't drop to zero, so this is not a proration. The net effect is to encourage customers late in the term of their contract to complete it. The U.S. Congress has been putting these ETFs under scrutiny, and AT&Ts announcement confirms that they see the handwriting on the wall regarding flat-rate ETFs.

AT&T's Mark Siegel told iPO that the Apple iPhone, however, requires a two year contract.

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A guest said: (hide)

So does that now mean that one can buy a iPhone and start with Month-to-Month? After all the iPhone is always purchased at full price and you are bringing it to AT&T if you purchased at from Apple.

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TosaDeac said:

member since 05 Feb 2008 with 16 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

I would imagine that some of the statement (specifically the month to month aspect) does not apply to the iPhone. Overall I would say that I have not experienced any problems with AT&T since I switched over from Sprint. Granted I have only had service for 5 months now though. Also the rates for the iPhone are actually much better than other smart phones. I have a friend that just got a Blackjack2 from AT&T and is paying more but not even getting a data plan! Obviously I told her to check into that, but I think they really nickle and dime you for internet and media on smart phones, whereas with the iPhone it is all included!

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gslusher said:

member since 13 Nov 2002 with 2088 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Guest wrote:
So does that now mean that one can buy a iPhone and start with Month-to-Month? After all the iPhone is always purchased at full price and you are bringing it to AT&T if you purchased at from Apple.

TosaDeac wrote:
I would imagine that some of the statement (specifically the month to month aspect) does not apply to the iPhone.

Read the last sentence/paragraph of the article, to wit:

"AT&T's Mark Siegel told iPO that the Apple iPhone, however, requires a two year contract."

(Emphasis in original)

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TosaDeac said:

member since 05 Feb 2008 with 16 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

They must have added that last sentence later!

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A guest said: (hide)

In order to go with the iphone I first had to terminate my Verizon plan.

I had no idea that would cost $150 in "pro-rated" early termination fees.

Posted my Verizon plan on www.adioswireless.com , got someone to take it over, paid $20 "finder fee" but now I've got the iphone.

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gslusher said:

member since 13 Nov 2002 with 2088 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Anonymous wrote:
In order to go with the iphone I first had to terminate my Verizon plan.

I had no idea that would cost $150 in "pro-rated" early termination fees.

Posted my Verizon plan on www.adioswireless.com , got someone to take it over, paid $20 "finder fee" but now I've got the iphone.

No idea? I guess you never read your Verizon contract. Sounds like a good solution, though. I let my Verizon contract run out and have refused to get a new contract, despite offers of a free new phone, just so that I can get an iPhone sometime this year. I hope that someone like DataViz comes out with an application like Documents to Go, which allows me to view (and edit) word processor and spreadsheet documents on my Palm TX. (I'm using an older version of DtG that works with AppleWorks documents; the latest version does not, but it does work with Word and Excel documents, which AppleWorks can export.)

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A guest said: (hide)

# Buy a phone at full price and go on a month-to-month service plan.

# Bring your own compatible GSM device. With this option, you can buy a SIM (subscriber identity module), slip it into the back of the phone, and select a month-to-month service plan.

I can't find anything at all regarding "month-to-month"/"month to month" on AT&T's website. I guess it's just another way of saying prepaid.

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