Compare No Contract Cell Phone Plans

Compare No Contract Cell Phone Plans

If you do not want to be trapped in an annual cell phone contract, but you do not have a problem with paying a fixed monthly fee for your wireless services, a no contract cell phone plan is just what you are looking for. In this post I compare the details of three no contract cell phone plans. You will find information on the available plans, costs per minute and the range of cell phones.

Net10

Net10 offers 4 different no contract cellular phone plans. The plans include local, national long distance and national roaming calls and texting. Monthly plans available (cost per minute-$0.10): $15/month for 150 minutes, $25/month for 250 minutes and $400/month for 400 minutes. You could also go for the Unlimited plan for local and long distance and national roaming calls and texting for $79.98/month. The product range includes around 20 phones mostly from LG and Motorola, but a few Kyocera and Nokia models are also included.

AT&T Pick Your Plan

AT&T offers the following 5 calling plans: $29.99/month for 200 minutes ($0.15/minute), $39.99 for 300 minutes ($0.133/minute), $49.99 for 400 minutes ($0.125/minute), and $69.99 for 650 minutes. There are no supplementary national long distance or national roaming charges. The product range includes around 20 phones by Nokia, Samsung, LG, Motorola and Sony Ericsson. There is even a full QWERTY keyboard cell phone in AT&T’s product range.

Consumer Cellular

Consumer Cellular focuses on clients over 50, but any person looking for a simple, no contract cell phone plan can use their services. The company offers 6 different no contract cell phone plans to choose from. The cheapest plan is $10/month and does not include any minutes. Calls you make are charged at $0.25/minute. This plan is the best choice if you only have a cell phone for sporadic use. The other plans are $20/month for 200 minutes ($0.10/minute), $30/month for 500 minutes ($0.06/minute), $40/month for 800 minutes ($0.05/minute), $50/month for 1200 minutes ($0.04/minute) and $60/month for 1600 minutes (less than 4 cents/minute). Family plans are available at an additional $10/month fee for every line. The phone range includes 4 Motorola and Nokia cell phones.

I hope this article was useful to you. If you want to have all the details such as phone prices, please visit my website.

Watch the video related to compare cell phone plans

This tutorial shows you how to to make unlimited cell phone calls using Google Voice 1) Have a google voice account 2) Foward your Google Voice phone number to your cell phone that you want it to work with 3) Make sure you are on one of the following plans with your cell phone carrier or something similar to these plans that let you have an unlimited calling list. T-Mobile / myfaves support.t-mobile.com AT&T / A-List www.wireless.att.com Verizon – Family & Frirends www.verizonwireless.com …

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About Author

Karen Johnson is an online researcher on everything related to cell phones in the US. She is dedicated to providing up-to-date, quality information about cell phone rate plans, phone models and features, accessories and more.
Her aim is to help people select the right rate plan or cell phone for their situation. Visit Karen’s website to find out more about her work, http://www.comparebestcellphoneplans.com/compare-no-contract-cell-phone-plans

9 Responses to “Compare No Contract Cell Phone Plans”

  1. if you hav verizon, no.

    but you have to pay for the full phone

  2. Virgin mobile has two different full-keyboard phones, the X-TC and The Wildcard. For $49.99, you will get 400 anytime minutes and unlimited night/weekend minutes. (nights start at 7:00 pm!) This plan also includes Unlimited text, picture messaging, email, IM, video messaging, and lanline texting.

  3. Nope!!!!!

  4. try sprint too. at&t is pain in the ass. go to the sprint.com, for you to know some of their services. :)

  5. I have

  6. yes I'm agree with you.

  7. I never waste my time reading a question longer than a few paragraphs.

    Most of the media is liberal. Interestingly, when you go overseas, you will sometimes be surprised at the non-biased nature of the publicationsd. The Manila Times is a great newspaper, very informative.

  8. They're probably going to hit you up with early termination fees. What I would do is ask to speak to a manager – from the get go.. since you have been calling to no avail… and ask them… if you still don't get a straight answer.. ask for their manager…

    And if they say no… look at how long you have been with t-mobile.. if a while, use that and see if they would make an exception and waive the fee. Offer them charging you, but when you re-sign – then them crediting it back.. make sure it's in writing, get their name, ID#, what ever… call back and make sure the rep sees that noted in your file before you go and terminate.

  9. well if ur looking for good signals don't go w/ AT&T. You get great call reception…as long as you are outside…but go into any building and there is a 95% chance u will lose ur signal. I have AT&T now and i can't get calls at where i work, more than half the buildings i have class in, and i have to stand next to a window in my apartment to be able to talk on the phone. rediculous! (and its not the phone itself…i've had 4 phones over the years and all have acted the same way so it has to be the network) So unless u are working/sleeping/living out in the elements, AT&T might not be for you…

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