Verizon Wireless Offers New $30 Senior Citizen Plan

verizon65

Up until now, if you needed a basic Verizon Wireless plan, you’d still have to shell out $40 per month for 450 minutes, 400 of which you may never use. Starting today, you’ll be able to get 200 anytime minutes and 500 weekend minutes for $30. Oh, one catch. You have to be at least 65 years old and Verizon actually does verify your age. 

I, myself, am not a fan of taking and/or making calls all day, preferring e-mail instead. As such, I have a $30 Sprint plan that includes 200 anytime minutes (I’ve never gone over) and unlimited evening and weekend minutes. If I were a Verizon customer, I’d have to wait a little over 36 years to get a similar plan.

This is weak. T-Mobile offers a $30 plan with 300 anytime minutes, Sprint’s has 200 anytime minutes, AT&T doesn’t offer one, and Verizon’s version is only available to old people. Either offer a $30 plan or don’t. AT&T’s plans don’t surprise me one bit but I expect better from “the wireless company with the highest customer loyalty.”

I’d hope to see this plan opened to everyone in the near future or at least have the age verification part of it become nothing more than a simple, “You’re 65, right? Okay.” 

Verizon Wireless Introduces America?s Choice 65 Plus Calling Plans [Press Release] via Phone Scoop

  •   

3 Comments so far

 

If you only use an average of 50 minutes a month (the “450 minutes, 400 of which you’ll never use” scenario) you’re typically much better off with a prepaid plan instead of a expensive contract, and those are typically available at any age.

If you’re in an area with fairly good Sprint coverage, for example, you can use Virgin Mobile’s 18c/minute plan (which includes long distance, and no fees or taxes other than sales tax). Average monthly cost (assuming 50 minutes): $9 plus sales tax.

Or, if T-Mobile works better for you, for $25 you can buy a 130-minute block (or a 150-minute block once you’ve reached Gold Rewards status). Average monthly cost (assuming 50 minutes): just under $10 plus sales tax.

On either plan, using more than usual is no big deal: you just buy more minutes, at the same low rates (instead of getting soaked for 45 cents a minute as with the Verizon plan above.) There’s a minimum purchase to keep your account active, but it’s pretty low ($20 per 90 days for Virgin, $25 per 90 days for T-Mobile) and your unused minutes can roll over (with Virgin, they keep rolling over as long as your account is active; I don’t know T-Mobile’s terms as well).

Verizon has prepaid plans as well (as does AT&T), but the terms weren’t nearly as good last I checked. (Verizon’s in particular had high daily charges and other gotchas.) Still, if that’s the only network that works for you, they may be worth comparing to the contract plans.

If you’re not sure whether other networks work well or not, though, you might want to give the Virgin or T-Mobile plans a try. If they don’t work well in your area, all you’re out is the cost of the phone and the minutes you’ve used, which can be less than just the activation charge on contract plans like Verizon’s.

 
no image
Theodore Sawchuck (Who am I?)

Or you could get a Sprint SERO plan and pay 35 for 500 anytime, unlimited nights and weekends after seven, and unlimited text and data.

 
no image
K. (Who am I?)

AT&T does offer a senior rate plan. It is for 200 mins a month. It is 29.99 I think.

Trackbacks/Pings

No trackbacks or pings yet.

Leave a Comment

« Back to text comment

Comment template by SezWho

CrunchGear Sponsors