Helainek
New Member
I experienced predatory billing, bill creep, increased spam calls, frequent dropped/lost calls and texts, and sluggish tech support. And I'm a bit angry about it, to be honest. I hope you consider the following before moving from one of the big 3 phone companies!
When switching to Consumer cellular, be careful. I was billed for several Gb of data that I did not and could not use. The phones we had were not properly configured when service was set up; we had no data and could access no websites, but the phones used 5 GB somehow, even though we are mostly on Wifi. Consumer Cellular said "too bad" and billed us for extra data, even after tech support confirmed that multiple phone settings were incorrect. They blamed AT&T policy. I blame the yahoo that set up my account. Either way, I paid.
With Consumer Cellular, if you go over your data (even if you cannot use apps or access websites because they didn't set you up right from the beginning) they bump you up to the next tier, and you have to take time to drop it back down by phone or online to get your low price again. Often, because of how the billing cycles work, they won't let you drop your data down; you get locked into paying for far more than you want to, even with the AARP discount. When you get fed up and cancel service to join a cheaper unlimited plan from a real cellular company, they will bill your card again-even if you specifically request that they remove it from your account and not bill it again, Ever.
When switching to Consumer cellular, be careful. I was billed for several Gb of data that I did not and could not use. The phones we had were not properly configured when service was set up; we had no data and could access no websites, but the phones used 5 GB somehow, even though we are mostly on Wifi. Consumer Cellular said "too bad" and billed us for extra data, even after tech support confirmed that multiple phone settings were incorrect. They blamed AT&T policy. I blame the yahoo that set up my account. Either way, I paid.
With Consumer Cellular, if you go over your data (even if you cannot use apps or access websites because they didn't set you up right from the beginning) they bump you up to the next tier, and you have to take time to drop it back down by phone or online to get your low price again. Often, because of how the billing cycles work, they won't let you drop your data down; you get locked into paying for far more than you want to, even with the AARP discount. When you get fed up and cancel service to join a cheaper unlimited plan from a real cellular company, they will bill your card again-even if you specifically request that they remove it from your account and not bill it again, Ever.