Update: The official end date to sign-up for this offer is
4/4/19 (and will not be extended again). Plans will remain active for one year from your sign-up date (promotion discount will be retired in full on 4/30/2020).
Sprint is offering
1-Year Unlimited Talk, Text & Data for
Free (pay only the monthly tax/fees per line) when you bring an eligible unlocked smartphone. Thanks andrewmackoul and comintel
Note, you will be required a purchase a Sprint SIM card to take advantage of this offer (SIM card is $2.99 ea. and $10 shipping & handling + tax).
Plan includes:
- Unlimited data, talk and text
- Video at speeds up to 1080p -> now 480p (DVD quality)
- Music at up to 1.5Mbps -> now 500 Kbps
- Gaming streams at up to 8Mbps -> now 2Mbps
- Unlimited 4G LTE data for most everything else. Data deprioritization applies during congestion.
After 4/30/2020 (or the one-year end date noted on your account, whichever comes first), the price will become:
- Line 1: $60/mo.
- Line 2: $40/mo.
- Lines 3-5: $20/mo. each per line
- Pricing shown with AutoPay. Add $5/mo. per line without AutoPay.
Eligible Devices (updated 3/11/19, domestic versions). Must be unlocked and/or compatible with Sprint SIM card and network.
Note,
other phones may be eligible. If your phone isn't listed below, you may check compatibility
here or on the promotion page by clicking on the "Get Started" link:
- Apple iPhone
- Apple iPhone 5c (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone 5s (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone 6
- Apple iPhone 6 Plus
- Apple iPhone 6s
- Apple iPhone 6s Plus
- Apple iPhone 7 (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone 7 Plus (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone 8 (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone 8 Plus (Verizon only)
- Apple iPhone SE
- Apple iPhone X (Verizon only)
- Google
- Google Nexus 5 (16 & 32 GB – black/white/red) (Verizon only)
- Google Nexus 5X (all versions)
- Google Nexus 6 (32 & 64 GB – black/white)
- Google Nexus 6P (all versions)
- Google Pixel
- Google Pixel XL
- Google Pixel 2
- Google Pixel XL 2
- Google Pixel 3
- Google Pixel XL 3
- Samsung
- Samsung Galaxy Note8 Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S7 edge Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S7 Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S8 (Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile)
- Samsung Galaxy S8+ (Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile)
- Samsung Galaxy S8 Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S8+ Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S9 Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy S9+ Special Edition
- Samsung Galaxy Note9
- Samsung Galaxy S10
- Samsung Galaxy S10e
- Samsung Galaxy S10+
- Motorola
- moto e4
- moto e4 plus
- moto g4
- moto g4 play
- moto g4 plus
- moto g5 plus
- moto g5s plus special edition
- moto g6
- moto g6 play
- moto G7 Reo
- moto x pure edition
- moto x4
- moto z2 play
- moto z3 play
- Other Brands
- Alcatel IDOL5
- Asus NovaGo
- BLU S1/VIVO S
- Essential Phone
- HTC One A9 (Sprint Version only)
- HP Spectre Folio GbPS ACPC
- Lenovo Miix 630
- Lenovo Yoga
- LG X Charge
- LG V30S
- LG V35 ThinQ
- LG G7 ThinQ
- LG Stylo 4
- LG V40 ThinQ
- Nuu A6LC
- Orbic Wonder
- ZTE Blade Max 2s
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I wouldn't say anything about prepaid, even if it is. The terms specifically say "postpaid", so people porting in from cricket(prepaid only), for example, could be in for a shocker if sprint decides to crack down.
Any current Sprint users in Orange County, CA that can share their current experience with Sprint? LTE Speeds? Is there service in Disneyland etc?
I left Sprint 2.5 years ago for Verizon because their LTE Speeds were horrible.
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one of the site says Teleport Communications America, LLC and landline. haha
but the other says AT&T local, also has a line that says "Is Wireless" and it says n. so i assume it means no not wireless cell vs landline?
one of the site says Teleport Communications America, LLC and landline. haha
but the other says AT&T local, also has a line that says "Is Wireless" and it says n. so i assume it means no not wireless cell vs landline?
2. Is this related to the FEC thing from Sprint?
3. A little confused since this phone was useable on Ting. Does that mean such a phone can be used on MVNO but never on Sprint itself?
2. Yes. This is basically an FED date that is contingent on meeting Boost's unlock policies (active for a continuous year, etc)
3. Yes, as long as it passes FED. There are some phones that pass FED but are marked as prepaid or MVNO phones, which Sprint makes ineligible for its network.
To clarify: Boost phones are, largely, unable to be activated on Sprint proper until they've met Boost's unlock policies. Even if you get someone to flip the flag (though my system won't let me), it will likely fail on the Sprint BYOD side because it's not met all the other requirements from Boost.
I'm in SoCal about 15 mins away from Disneyland and often times I cannot run a speed test because their service is so lousy. I'm somewhat regretting transferring from AT&T, but considering this is free and I don't depend on my line for business, I think I can put up with this for a year. When I was with AT&T, I usually had an LTE signal and it was rare to see 4G HSPA, let alone 3G. With Sprint inside my house, I barely even get a 3G signal but to be fair, my house is somewhat in a cellular dead zone.
I'm in SoCal about 15 mins away from Disneyland and often times I cannot run a speed test because their service is so lousy. I'm somewhat regretting transferring from AT&T, but considering this is free and I don't depend on my line for business, I think I can put up with this for a year. When I was with AT&T, I usually had an LTE signal and it was rare to see 4G HSPA, let alone 3G. With Sprint inside my house, I barely even get a 3G signal but to be fair, my house is somewhat in a cellular dead zone.
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