AT&T extending upgrade cycle

RenoD2010

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2011
302
0
0
Visit site
If your contract expired March or later, you will now have to wait 24 months instead of 20 to receive a subsidy on a new phone.

Sent from my LG-E970 using AC Forums mobile app
 

dcunited08

Well-known member
Jan 18, 2012
87
0
0
Visit site
If your contract expired March or later, you will now have to wait 24 months instead of 20 to receive a subsidy on a new phone.

Sent from my LG-E970 using AC Forums mobile app

That sucks, think we can complain enough to get it reversed?

Sent from my Transformer Prime TF201 using Tapatalk HD
 

meyerweb#CB

Banned
Sep 4, 2009
6,668
5
0
Visit site
They're following Verizon's lead. Personally, I think it's short sighted. If they let me upgrade a 20 months, I'm still in contract and pretty much have to stay with the existing carrier if I want an early upgrade. If they make me wait the full 2 years, I'm no longer under contract, and it's much easier for me to bolt and try someone else.
 

jblank

Active member
Nov 12, 2012
42
0
0
Visit site
Well that is the clincher for my wife and I then, we're gonna leave 'em. This was kind of the one thing that AT&T had over the other carriers, that had us wanting to stay and now, this is the last straw. I think it's a huge mistake for them.
 

JoJoCal19

Well-known member
Apr 9, 2011
225
11
0
Visit site
Well that is the clincher for my wife and I then, we're gonna leave 'em. This was kind of the one thing that AT&T had over the other carriers, that had us wanting to stay and now, this is the last straw. I think it's a huge mistake for them.

Honestly, it doesn't much make sense to be in contract anymore. Just grab the new GoPhone plan at $65 per line that gets to use LTE and all of the features like visual voicemail, etc or if not, Net10/ST wireless. Nowadays you can buy a slightly used couple month old phone on CL or eBay for not much more than on contract pricing anyways. I myself am leaving VZW for AIO wireless.
 

RenoD2010

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2011
302
0
0
Visit site
I still think AT&T is better Verizon or the prepaid carriers.

Posted via Android Central App

Personally, aside from pricing, AT&Fee actually has been quite good to me (jeesh, especially when compared to Comcast). They have reversed countless fees, have yet to throttle my data (I have unlimited and occasionally go over the 3GB - now bumped to 5GB because I have an LTE phone) and have excellent coverage in all the places I need it.

I still use the nickname AT&Fee because the price of service for what you get is still out of whack.

As for this extended upgrade cycle; my wife just got her iPhone 4s in October and is very happy with it and I got this phone only a month ago. We have a third line for my mother-in-law which we pay for on the condition that we can hold her upgrade (this July) in reserve should we decide one of us wants to change phones or something happens to the ones we have.

Sent from my LG-E970 using AC Forums mobile app
 

21stNow

Well-known member
Feb 15, 2013
730
0
0
Visit site
So is this a good enough contract change to allow us to cancel our contract without paying an ETF?

No, because it is not a change in contract. An upgrade starts a new contract. The next upgrade date is not part of the current contract and could have changed at any time. When you view your upgrade eligibility in the OLAM, it is for informational purposes only, and does not constitute a guaranteed offer.
 
Last edited:

Almeuit

Moderator Team Leader
Moderator
Apr 17, 2012
32,277
23
0
Visit site
No, because it is not a change in contract. An upgrade starts a new contract. The next upgrade date is not part of the current contract and could have changed at any time. When you view your upgrade eligibility in the OLAM, it is for informational purposes only, as does not constitute a guaranteed offer.

This.

Sent from my Sprint S3 using AC forums.
 

yfan

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2009
902
0
0
Visit site
I think this is a good thing. Like a poster already said, this will remove the incentive to stay with AT&T rather than shop around for another carrier when your upgrade becomes available - which now coincides with the time your contract expires. AT&T will either have to retain those customers on merit or lose them. This will also accelerate the move towards decoupling the phone from the carrier, as more people look for options and buy a phone on their own, avoiding contracts altogether. This means there will be more interest in unlocked phones (especially Google's Nexus/experience phones). Hopefully the market pressure of the move away from subsidized phones will also force carriers to lower prices or at least, offer decent prepaid plans.
 

RenoD2010

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2011
302
0
0
Visit site
I think this is a good thing. Like a poster already said, this will remove the incentive to stay with AT&T rather than shop around for another carrier when your upgrade becomes available - which now coincides with the time your contract expires. AT&T will either have to retain those customers on merit or lose them. This will also accelerate the move towards decoupling the phone from the carrier, as more people look for options and buy a phone on their own, avoiding contracts altogether. This means there will be more interest in unlocked phones (especially Google's Nexus/experience phones). Hopefully the market pressure of the move away from subsidized phones will also force carriers to lower prices or at least, offer decent prepaid plans.

Here's hoping.

Sent from my LG-E970 using AC Forums mobile app
 

icwhatudidthere

Well-known member
Mar 14, 2011
408
9
0
Visit site
I'm so sad. This change was enough of a nudge for me to finally give T-Mobile a try. Picked up an HTC One yesterday and it turns out I love it. But T-Mobile service is horrible where I need it. I am actually on get this: not 4G, not faux G, not 3G, not even 2G, but good ole original OG GPRS in my office! And that's next to a window in midtown Manhattan.

Guess I'm stuck.