As anyone who has bought one can tell you, the cost of a smartphone is more than just the initial price of the device. You also have monthly payments to deal with, for voice minutes, text messages, and of course, data. You can choose to either be frugal if you can squeak on by with the bare minimum or you can go for the pricier package if you want unlimited everything.
In light of recent changes to smartphone data plans and in anticipation of potential new 4G plans, we’ve compiled and calculated the cheapest and most-expensive pricing plans below to help you in your carrier decision. To keep things simple, we did not include corporate or family plans, and we also didn’t include T-Mobile’s no-contract price plan, as the other carriers don’t have a comparable model. All of the carriers have plans that range in between the cheapest and most expensive, but as these plans vary so widely from carrier to carrier, it was difficult to compare all of them. We decided that comparing just the cheapest and most expensive would be the most useful.
We calculated the cheapest plans by adding up the cheapest of all the voice, messaging, and data options (we assumed that most smartphone users will want at least a basic messaging plan rather than no messaging plan at all). Conversely, we calculated the most-expensive plans by adding up the most expensive of all three options. As all four major carriers require a data plan with their smartphones, we’ve also included that by default. Typically, the costliest plans include unlimited voice, messaging, and data. For the nonunlimited data plans, we’ve also included overage fee information.
We also know that a lot of smartphone users don’t use a lot of talk minutes, but are ardent users of text and data, so we added up monthly plans with the lowest minutes but with unlimited text and/or data usage. Interestingly, only T-Mobile and Verizon have plans that don’t require a voice plan at all. The Verizon one does let you make voice calls, but for 40 cents a minute, so it’s for those who don’t plan on making a lot of calls. (Edit: We’re getting “Service unavailable” errors when trying to sign up for this service, so we’ll add that as a caveat in the chart below.)
Last but not least, we added the cost of mobile hot spot/portable tethering to the chart for those who have a smartphone that can be used as a 3G or 4G wireless hot spot or modem.
Network | Sprint* | T-Mobile | AT&T | Verizon |
Cheapest bundle | $79.99 for 450 minutes, and unlimited text and data* | $59.99 for 500 minutes, unlimited text, and 200MB data | $64.99 for 450 minutes, 1,000 messages, and 200MB data | $59.99 for 450 minutes, 250 messages, and 150MB data |
Cheapest bundle with unlimited text | See above | See above | $74.99 for 450 minutes, unlimited text, and 200MB data | $74.99 for 450 minutes, unlimited text, and 150MB data |
Cheapest bundle with unlimited data (or the highest data) | See above | $79.99 for 500 minutes, and unlimited text and data | $74.99 for 450 minutes, 1,000 messages, and 2GB data | $74.99 for 450 minutes, 250 messages, and unlimited data |
Cheapest bundle with unlimited text AND data | See above | See above | $84.99 for 450 minutes, unlimited text, and 2GB data | $89.98 for 450 minutes, and unlimited text and data |
Most expensive bundle | $109.99 for unlimited everything* | $99.99 for unlimited everything | $114.99 for unlimited voice, text, and 2GB data | $119.98 for unlimited everything |
Overage fees for nonunlimited data plans | N/A | 200MB plan: 10 cents per MB with a maximum of $50 for data | 200MB plan: $15 for each additional 200MB; 2GB plan: $10 for each additional 1GB | 150MB plan: $15 for each additional 150MB |
Data plan only (unlimited, no voice plan) | N/A | $49.99 | N/A | N/A (see below) |
Data and messaging only (unlimited, no voice plan) Update: Might not be available. | N/A | N/A | N/A | $34.99. No voice plan, but you can make calls for 40 cents a minute. |
Mobile hot spot/tethering | $29.99 | $14.99 | $20 | $20 |
*We’ve added $10 to the Sprint plans because of the carrier’s recent decision to implement a premium $10 monthly data add-on for smartphones.
We understand that all of the different pricing options can be confusing and we hope this chart is helpful to you. We admit that we were quite overwhelmed ourselves when researching this article–the carriers don’t exactly make it easy. If you have anything to add, or if you have any questions, please reply in the comment thread below or send us an e-mail.