Mobile phone overage fees? It's time to upgrade your plan
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When Sarah and I signed our first cell phone contract, we signed up for a plan that gave us roughly 400 minutes per month, which seemed like a reasonable amount based on our estimates. After the two year contract, we found that we had only gone over that limit twice, so we signed up again for the same limit.
Before our next contract signing, we sat down to evaluate our situation. During the previous two years, we had only gone over our alloted minutes twice, so it seemed straightforward that we would just continue our plan.
There was a bit of a catch, though. We still had those bills from the overage months, and when we sat down and did the math,聽the cost of our overage minutes from those months was far higher than the two year cost of a plan that would cover all of those minutes.
That鈥檚 right. Upgrading to a plan that covered all of that usage聽and聽gave us far more breathing room in every other month was cheaper than the overage costs of just two months of usage.聽
Needless to say, after some shopping around, we upgraded our minutes.
Overage costs, whether due to data use, text messages, cell phone minutes, or any other reason, can be incredibly expensive. It only takes a little bit of overage to eat up a lot of dollars.
The trouble for many people is that the overages aren鈥檛 a regular thing. It鈥檚 obvious you should upgrade your plan if you鈥檙e going over several months a year, but what about one or two months a year?
Those are the situations where聽you owe it to yourself to run the numbers.
Here鈥檚 how you do it.
Pull out a bill with overage fees.聽The key piece of information you need here is how much a single minute of overage costs you, or what a single text message overage costs you. If it鈥檚 an added expense beyond your plan, what is it costing you per minute or per text message or per megabyte? Get it down to dollars and cents.
Then, if you can,聽look back through old bills to figure out how much you go over in a given year.聽Do you routinely go over your data limit each month, but 鈥渏ust a little鈥? Do you go over your minutes by 100 鈥 but just three times a year? How much do you really go over?
Multiplying these two numbers together will give you a good indication of the annual cost of your overage.
狈辞飞,听check out the website of your provider聽and figure out what plans they offer. Are there any plans that cover your overage so that you won鈥檛 have overage fees any more? How much extra does that cost per month? Multiply that extra cost by twelve and you have your annual cost for a plan that eliminates overage fees for you.
Once you have these two results, go with the one that鈥檚 cheaper. Most of the time, it鈥檒l be the better plan, not the 鈥渙ccasional鈥 overage.
Even if it turns out that your overages are less expensive, it鈥檚 still a worthwhile exercise, because now youknow聽they鈥檙e cheaper. As with anything, the less you pay for the same service, the better.
This post is part of a yearlong series called 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap (Revisited),鈥 in which I鈥檓 revisiting the entries from my book 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap,鈥 which is available聽at Amazon聽and at bookstores everywhere.聽