Best mobile data deals: Push your limits

The party is over, people, and all you can eat data plans are
dropping faster than a pair of trousers at a Chippendales convention.
But smart
phones
are getting thirstier than ever for a foaming pint of
gigabytes.

T-Mobile slashed
one of the best data plans
in the business yesterday, following
similar changes by Vodafone
and O2.
So where should you go if you’re a downloading machine? We’ve tracked
down the best data deals we could find, laid them on a silver
platter, and decorated them with a little sprig of parsley. Enjoy.

But first, a note on limited data plans versus unlimited plans with
a fair-use policy. If a deal has a data limit — say, 1GB — then when
you go over, you start paying extra. Deals with a fair-use policy
aren’t that hard and fast, but give the company an out if you’re using dollops of data.

Generally, you’ll receive a text warning you if you’re approaching
the fair-use limit, then possibly asked to upgrade to a pricier deal, or even cut off if you keep it up — but usually not charged just for
going over the fair use limit.

The iPhone
tends to come with special deals from the networks that sell it. Check
out our best
iPhone 4 deals
for our take on those deals.

How much data do you need? That’s a tough one. Most people use less
than 500MB, but then, most people don’t know how their phone works. If
you’re using a smart phone, especially one with a lot of live
widgets that pull down data all the time, we think 500MB is the bare
minimum. If you’ve got an Android
phone
, for example, and you like to use its apps and features to
the maximum, we’d recommend a 1GB limit.

It’s also worth thinking about Wi-Fi — if you’re connected to a
wireless network at home and at work, that will slash the amount of
data you use over your mobile network. Also, some of the networks
include subscriptions to Wi-Fi networks such as BT Openzone — if they’re
present in your area, that could save you data too.

Finally, a piece of advice on SIM-only deals: they rock. If you can
possibly stand to buy a phone SIM-free and unlocked — which is a
pricey proposition, unless you find your dream phone used on eBay —
you’ll pay less overall, less per month, get more data, and be able
to switch to a better deal whenever you want, with a SIM-only plan.

Three

Three offers a SIM-only 12-month contract called the One
Plan
, which includes 2,000 minutes, 5,000 texts and unlimited data
for £25 per month. If you need a phone, there’s also a 24-month One
Plan
where you can snag a smart phone for free, starting from £25 a month.

If you don’t need quite such a bottomless pit of Internet, Three has
some generous limited plans too. Its Text 500
plan gives you 1GB of data, 5,000 texts and 500 minutes starting at £13
a month, depending on what phone you pick to go with it.

giffgaff

giffgaff only sells SIM cards, not phones, so you’ll need your own
phone to use it. The company, which runs on O2’s network, is a bit on
the wacky side, but we’ve used it and it works a treat. Its £10 goodybag deal scores
you 250 minutes, unlimited texts and unlimited Internet, and you’re
only locked in for one month at a time.

Other options

Virgin Mobile offers 1GB of data on some plans, starting from £20.43
a month on the pithily named Virgin
£20.43 Web
deal, although it’s cheaper if you have a BlackBerry.

If you’re keen on Vodafone, you can add ‘unlimited’ Internet — with
a 500MB fair-use policy — to its SIM-only
deals
for £5.11 per month.

Similarly, if you simply must have T-Mobile, you can have the same
‘unlimited’, 500MB fair-use add-on with its monthly deals
for free on a £10.21 contract over 24 months.

Tesco Mobile is another network for whom ‘unlimited’ means a 500MB
fair-use policy. It’s offering contracts on that deal starting
at £15 a month
for 24 months, which includes 100 minutes and
unlimited texts. It also does a good one-month
SIM-only
deal for £10, which includes 500 minutes, unlimited texts
and data.

The walk of shame

We couldn’t find any decent data deals on Orange’s mind-bending
website — although many plans claim to include “Internet”, a closer
look at Orange’s
price plans
reveals that this could consist of as little as 250MB a
month.

To get 1GB of data per month on Orange, you’ll have to shell out for a
24-month, £45.96-a-month Panther plan. You could add 1GB of browsing to
a cheaper plan — almost essential if you’re buying a data-hungry phone
such as the Orange
San Francisco
— but it costs a whopping £10.21 a month extra.

O2 has ditched its reputation for being the network for smart-phone
lovers by cutting the data allowance on most of its plans to 500MB. If
you want 1GB, you’ll have to spend over £60 a month on a 24-month smart-phone
deal
. For shame. A bolt-on that adds 500MB to your plan costs £5.11
a month.

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