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popular Posted by AJ619 • May 16, 2025
popular Posted by AJ619 • May 16, 2025

T-Mobile Business Unlimited Select - BYOD - 10 lines for $100

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My previous T-Mobile business rep sent me this pretty great offer. If you're able to switch over from any company that's not a T-Mobile company, they're offering 10 lines for $100 and every line after that is only $10. Things to know: This is an offer for businesses this plan does not qualify for phone promotions. He also has device data plans available for $15/device.


https://go.business.t-mobile.com/...68a8d40c7f
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My previous T-Mobile business rep sent me this pretty great offer. If you're able to switch over from any company that's not a T-Mobile company, they're offering 10 lines for $100 and every line after that is only $10. Things to know: This is an offer for businesses this plan does not qualify for phone promotions. He also has device data plans available for $15/device.


https://go.business.t-mobile.com/...68a8d40c7f

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May 17, 2025
717 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
May 17, 2025
chaolanren
May 17, 2025
717 Posts
so do i have to sent them an email to get this offer?
May 17, 2025
673 Posts
Joined Apr 2018
May 17, 2025
Fancy_Deer
May 17, 2025
673 Posts
Quote from WildflowerGuru :
When John Legere ran T Mobile it was extraordinary. I had just switched from garbage Sprint because ATT Verizon were 3x the cost. T Mobile signal was only the big inner city metro. As soon as they started their build out, I switched to T Mo on a deal. But as with everyone, Legere felt it was time to leave after bringing this company to true nationwide service, dirt cheap plans, little tuesday perks. The new guy has been hell bent on destroying a good company. Nickel and dime you to death. Lie about everything.
The previous guy was a $cumbag too, he fooled everyone to get the merger through and than ran away with his bonus, that was always their plan
May 17, 2025
673 Posts
Joined Apr 2018
May 17, 2025
Fancy_Deer
May 17, 2025
673 Posts
Quote from miajonda :
Nah. You are underestimating how truly great plans and promos were under John Legere. My current One plan is roughly $40-$50 for 9 lines with taxes and fees all included, and I don't even have insider discount and I only joined in the middle of John Legere's regime. There are plenty of people with ridiculous grandfathered plans at the moment. I guess the only real downside is we normally can't take advantage of the phone deals, which doesn't really matter considering how much we still save every month on plans.
I guess you have kickback and 9+ lines so it reduces the bill significantly
May 17, 2025
4,317 Posts
Joined Aug 2005
May 17, 2025
Mydiscover
May 17, 2025
4,317 Posts
Quote from Nachiketkc :
Wow this is insane! Even the folks with grandfathered plans and stacked free lines probably can't beat this!
Not really. I have 6 lines for $68 including all fees and taxes. The big thing is 5 of my lines all qualify for upgrades which i did at costco for the trade in of iphone 12s for $500 credit plus free $100 costco gift cards and no upgrade fees.
May 17, 2025
1,576 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
May 17, 2025
asuka
May 17, 2025
1,576 Posts
Quote from AJ619 :
They won't allow people to switch within T-Mobile to this plan. I tried.

You can add new lines, but as I said two pages ago, you can't swap.

Any lines you port out or cancel 90 days prior to adding new lines will likely cause the system to error out.

This prevents port churn, where you port the number out and add it back again with the promo.
Last edited by asuka May 17, 2025 at 02:47 AM.
May 17, 2025
1,576 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
May 17, 2025
asuka
May 17, 2025
1,576 Posts
Quote from phonic :
I think you are reading way too much into that, and I'm willing to bet that this same clause is in consumer line T&Cs too.

I could be wrong, but if I had to make a guess I think this is specifically about people calling certain, let's call them "special", US phone numbers that offer 'chat' or 'conference' services. I'm actually kind of surprised this is still a thing, and it might be some outdated reference, but I know for a fact that, back in the day, there were regular US phone numbers that offered these free conference calling services that ended up making money off of high per minute surcharges that they would get from the outgoing caller's phone provider. Basically, it had to do with how phone companies bill each other. If you place a call from Telco A to a phone number owned by Telco B, Telco A had to pay a carriage fee to Telco B for that call. And vice versa. This was more noticeable back before "free unlimited nationwide calling" was everywhere, but still exists behind the scenes. It's usually very small amounts and often is a wash between two high volume carriers with fairly balanced caller vs callee distributions. BUT, the rates the phone company could charge varied a lot and were dependent on certain regulated factors. Small phone companies in very remote areas could charge a lot more than say Bell Atlantic in New Jersey (I'm probably dating myself here a bit).

Anyway, companies realized that this per-minute destination fee could add up to a LOT over time and they could make a boat load of money by just getting people to call into their network. But that would require a lot of inbound calls. Of course these were generally in small towns in places like Utah (801 area code was a common one of these things), and not many people would normally call there. So, what could they do? They setup 'free' conference bridges. You could call some number and talk to other people using one of these services. And they made enough money to not only pay for the conference calling infrastructure and overhead, but turn a tidy profit as well. It was 'free' for the caller, outside of long distance fees back when that was a thing, so people would use them a lot. And while phone companies would charge a flat fee per minute, or not if you had unlimited calling, they would pay a LOT more to place calls to these numbers. When it was just Bob calling Aunt Marie to wish her a happy birthday, it wasn't that big of a deal. But when you had thousands and thousands of people calling into these services for hours at a time, it added up quick.

So a lot of these big phone companies realized that this was costing them way too much money, was basically being exploited by a loophole, and not something they wanted to keep covering the costs of, so they created these exception clauses. So if you happen to call one of these numbers that would cost them say $0.10/minute, they would charge that to you instead of eating it themselves. Hence the weird exception for calls not "direct communication between 2 people" getting put into service contracts. Again, I don't even know if this is still a thing anymore with the advent of free calls across the board and I'd be willing to bet its more of a legacy T&C that they just keep in place in case it ever becomes an issue again.

Fun fact: like 20 years ago, a buddy of mine figured out an arbitrage situation where he could buy minutes in bulk from AT&T and setup one of these BS tiny phone companies in bumf**k nowhere. He would pay like $0.03/min and make $0.05/min, netting a profit of $0.02/min (or something like that, I forget the specifics, but you get the point). He automated the whole thing so it just burned through minutes and he started making like $10k+ a month for a while. A computer would place multiple calls to his numbers, another computer would answer and just sit there using up minutes. Until AT&T caught on and stopped paying him. I think he ended up suing but I'm not sure what happened.

Anyway, now you know one more useless fact. Enjoy.

It's called Traffic Pumping. It mostly died with VoIP taking off and Zoom, etc.

Technically still a thing, but the FCC rules have effectively nulled it. Very few people even have landlines to trigger it, since cellular largely bypasses with eased LD carrier switching rates and agreements (facilitated by, you guessed it, VoIP).

https://www.fcc.gov/general/traffic-pumping
May 17, 2025
381 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
May 17, 2025
MrChalupacabra
May 17, 2025
381 Posts
Quote from SiennaLake7963 :
The ultimate Edge plan has $1000 off per line over 36 months .. wondering if this is combinable with $600 credit for BYOD .. in which case the service would be essentially $0.55/line/mo + taxes

45*36 =1,620 - 1,600
Ultimate Edge plan?

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May 17, 2025
4,598 Posts
Joined Jul 2008
May 17, 2025
MrStealYourHamster
May 17, 2025
4,598 Posts
T-Mobile no longer grandfather's. Typical switch and bait
May 17, 2025
1 Posts
Joined May 2025
May 17, 2025
MemorableTexture578
May 17, 2025
1 Posts
Quote from Mydiscover :
Not really. I have 6 lines for $68 including all fees and taxes. The big thing is 5 of my lines all qualify for upgrades which i did at costco for the trade in of iphone 12s for $500 credit plus free $100 costco gift cards and no upgrade fees.
How do you get that deal?
May 18, 2025
1,576 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
May 18, 2025
asuka
May 18, 2025
1,576 Posts
Quote from Fancy_Deer :
The previous guy was a $cumbag too, he fooled everyone to get the merger through and than ran away with his bonus, that was always their plan

He was forced out, and wanted to stay. I can't say all I know without getting sued... But he didn't want to leave.

SoftBank offered him a job and DT used it as a means of forcing him out - despite SB doing it unilaterally.
May 18, 2025
1,576 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
May 18, 2025
asuka
May 18, 2025
1,576 Posts
Quote from Phaenon :
Can you confirm which promos stack here in a BYOD set up?

There are no promos that stack with this plan. BYOD only, no finance, no additional discounts.

It's $10. This is why.
May 18, 2025
4,796 Posts
Joined Aug 2006
May 18, 2025
huge
May 18, 2025
4,796 Posts
Did anyone get this deal?
Any legit links?
May 18, 2025
2,359 Posts
Joined Mar 2006
May 18, 2025
illtww
May 18, 2025
2,359 Posts
does this allow inflight wifi?
May 18, 2025
345 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
May 18, 2025
Richpocket
May 18, 2025
345 Posts
we need to have at least 10 lines, we can't do like 4 lines @$10 a line correct?

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May 18, 2025
10 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
May 18, 2025
GavrielG
May 18, 2025
10 Posts
Quote from borodin1 :
Does anyone know if I can switch my personal T-mo plan to a business plan or is it a hard requirement to switch from a different provider?

You can switch, but you would lose all your current active promotions and if you have phone promotions they become due. Switching is like creating a brand new account.

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