Mobile phone contracts
One of the first cutbacks in reviewing my budget was my mobile phone - by the end of the contract this had risen to £35 a month after a half price deal had finished 12 months before. I’ve always been on contract and have never tried pay-as-you-go, so thought I’ll try it out as a way of keeping track of my expenses.
£35 may be pittance compared to the girlfriends bill (£90 last month) but still felt unnecessary as I rarely used all my free minutes (I use email much more)
This didn’t stop 10 minutes of polite “No”s to the 3 salesman trying to convince me to take out a new contract. I felt 18 months is a long time for any mobile phone contract at the moment, particularly with new deals coming out.
One of the big pluses with a contract phone is that you get a new phone out of the deal, but my Sony Ericsson’s performs well (well it takes calls and texts - thats all it has to do really innit? ) and I’d still be contactable.
Naturally if you use a phone more than I do, you may want to consider a contract, but I’m always conscious that the companies make their money on the contracts, not the phones.
3 my provider tried to sign me up to the £15 a month 300 anytime minutes or texts, which gives you 300 minutes or texts or some combination of the two. This works out at 5p a minute or text.
I’ll compare this is the Pay-As-You-Go 12p a minute I’ll be on, but know I’ll be a lot less likely to use the phone with this rate upon it. If I use the phone more than 125 minutes a month, I’ll be better off on the pay-as-you-go.
Am I just being kooky not wanting to be tied to a contract? I just feel having the money coming out of my account kind of forces you to use the phone more.
Tags: budgeting, mobile phones, 3, contracts, tips

[...] month I spoke of going onto pay-as-you-go on my mobile to try and cut expenses, despite hassle from the call centre working hard to change my mind - [...]