Wireless Carriers Are Messing With Your Autopay Discount
According to a new report by The Wall Street Journal, mobile carriers including Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile are all requiring customers to switch to a debit card or bank account withdrawal in order to receive an autopay discount on their plan. Verizon has included this requirement for years, but in the past few months the other two carriers have quietly added it too. The Verge reports: The new rule goes into effect for AT&T customers on October 2nd, and as a gesture of goodwill, the company will only reduce your discount if you continue to pay with a credit card. Those who register for autopay with a bank or debit card will receive $10 off; a credit card will only get you $5. T-Mobile’s change went into effect in July, also eliminating Apple Pay and Google Pay as methods eligible for the $5 discount. Oh, and technically, you can qualify for Verizon’s autopay discount with a credit card — it just has to be a Verizon Visa card.
AT&T and T-Mobile aren’t just making this a requirement for new customers — the change is being applied to all postpaid accounts. Even if you’ve been receiving the discount for years with a credit card, you’ll have to make the switch in order to keep your discount. And it adds up — the discounts are applied for each line on your plan, so if your whole family is on the same plan, it’s a significant amount of money.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
According to a new report by The Wall Street Journal, mobile carriers including Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile are all requiring customers to switch to a debit card or bank account withdrawal in order to receive an autopay discount on their plan. Verizon has included this requirement for years, but in the past few months the other two carriers have quietly added it too. The Verge reports: The new rule goes into effect for AT&T customers on October 2nd, and as a gesture of goodwill, the company will only reduce your discount if you continue to pay with a credit card. Those who register for autopay with a bank or debit card will receive $10 off; a credit card will only get you $5. T-Mobile’s change went into effect in July, also eliminating Apple Pay and Google Pay as methods eligible for the $5 discount. Oh, and technically, you can qualify for Verizon’s autopay discount with a credit card — it just has to be a Verizon Visa card.
AT&T and T-Mobile aren’t just making this a requirement for new customers — the change is being applied to all postpaid accounts. Even if you’ve been receiving the discount for years with a credit card, you’ll have to make the switch in order to keep your discount. And it adds up — the discounts are applied for each line on your plan, so if your whole family is on the same plan, it’s a significant amount of money.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.