Home  ›  Carriers  ›

T-Mobile

Info & Phones News Forum  

all discussions

Question about Month to Month

devilsfan

Dec 5, 2004, 4:44 AM
I'm currently on the 1000 minutes free nights and weekends for 39.99 a month. No other carrier can touch this deal, its great! Anyway, when my contract ends in March of 2005, can I just stay on this contract on a month to month basis?

Also, can I get a new phone in my 11th month? Will I have to sign up for a new year contract, even if my deal is no longer offered for 39.99? Can I sign up for another year on my existing contracT?

anyone know ? Thanks in advance!
...
mingkee

Dec 5, 2004, 11:32 AM
yes
you can stay as long as you want after contract expiration, like I do
I know by their policy, reaching-expiration customers are eligible to get a new phone as new customer, with rebate (if any), but it has to be done in the store
...
bizkitsngravy

Dec 5, 2004, 12:10 PM
mingkee said:
yes
you can stay as long as you want after contract expiration, like I do
I know by their policy, reaching-expiration customers are eligible to get a new phone as new customer, with rebate (if any), but it has to be done in the store

Well, not necessarily customers have the options of upgrading either at a store, or through customer care, shipping vs. getting the phone same day being the only differece. Well, that and some people prefer us to put the cost of the phone on their bill, and at the store you must pay up front. You still have to meet the "same as new" pricing criteria, which is 11 months of active (not suspended) time on a qualifying pricing plan ($39.99 and up for single line, and...
(continues)
...

You must log in to reply.

Please log in to report a message to the moderator.


all discussions

Subscribe to Phone Scoop News with RSS Follow @phonescoop on BlueSky Follow @phonescoop on Mastodon Follow @phonescoop on Threads Phone Scoop on Facebook

 

Playwire

All content Copyright 2001-2025 Phone Factor, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Content on this site may not be copied or republished without formal permission.