

Verizon’s unlimited plans can be mixed and matched on the same family plan account. Prices above apply only if AutoPay and paperless billing are enabled. This add-on is only available to Beyond Unlimited and Above Unlimited customers.
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Verizon charges an extra $10-per-month fee if you want to stream 1080p video on your smartphone. $95 single line / $180 for two lines / $210 for three lines / $240 for four lines Each month, Verizon tosses in 5 TravelPasses (good for 4G speeds until you cross 512MB of daily usage) that work in over 130 countries. Video, even on the highest plan, is still limited to 720p.
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Hotspot is full speed LTE until 20GB of usage.
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$85 single line / $160 for two lines / $180 for three lines / $200 for four linesĪbove Unlimited: You get unlimited data free of potential slowdowns until you pass 75GB of usage in a month, which is probably a ceiling you’ll never hit. The mobile hotspot feature offers full LTE speeds until you hit 15GB of usage. $75 single line / $130 for two lines / $150 for three lines / $160 for four linesīeyond Unlimited: You get unlimited data free of potential slowdowns until you pass 22GB of usage in a month. Video streaming off Wi-Fi is limited to 480p. Go Unlimited: You get unlimited data, but at any time, your service might be temporarily slowed down in favor of other customers when the network is busy or “congested.” Mobile hotspot speeds are restricted to just 600kbps. Let’s review how the leading US carrier is currently dividing up “unlimited” and reserving the most useful features and the best speeds for the more expensive tiers: How could anyone? Doesn’t it sound like Beyond Unlimited should be better than Above Unlimited? It’s actually the opposite, by Verizon’s logic. Would you be able to tell whether Verizon’s Above Unlimited or Beyond Unlimited is the more premium plan? No. By name alone, it’s incredibly difficult to parse what you’re getting from each and what the downsides might be. The confusing mess consumers face when choosing a smartphone plan in 2018 is partially due to the nonsensical branding that carriers have come up with to differentiate from one another. The plans: What do words even mean anymore?

They continue to arbitrarily differentiate between the different types of data you’re accessing with your smartphone - whether it’s through an app or simply the mobile web. Now more than ever, carriers are aggressively policing their networks and implementing restrictions on video quality and hotspot usage.

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Even so, unlimited data today is much different than in the early days of the iPhone and Android smartphones. But some prodding from T-Mobile helped turn the industry around and left data buckets behind as an ugly memory. Consumers are generally in a better place now than they were a few years ago, back when Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint were offering tiered buckets of data and charging $10 or $15 for every extra gigabyte above your chosen allotment. In an era without net neutrality, we’ve drifted far, far away from the days when “unlimited data” was a simple concept that meant you could use your smartphone to its full capabilities without any handcuffs or confusing limitations.Ĭarriers will tell you that the fundamental, underlying promise of unlimited data remains true in 2018: you can use your smartphone as much as you want without overage charges or being cut off once you’ve surpassed a specific threshold.

These are the names of new mobile data plans introduced in just the last month by Verizon and AT&T.
