Update: This popular deal is available again.
Total Wireless is offering their
Total Wireless Service: 256GB Motorola Razr 6.9" FHD+ 5G Smartphone (2024 Model/Black) +
2-Months 5G Unlimited Plan (
$55/month) on sale for
Free +
2-Month $55/Plan =
$110 w/
Activation + External Port-In/ID Verification only.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to community member
CoolThread698 for finding this deal
Note, you may opt-in for Total Wireless 5G+ Unlimited plan for
$60/Month. Additionally, you may save an additional
$5 Off/Month w/ Auto Pay (
enabled in your Total Wireless Dashboard)
Specs/Key Features - MediaTek Dimensity 7300X Processor
- 6.9" FHD+ pOLED Touchscreen Display w/ 50MP + 13MP Rear Camera/32MP Front Camera
- 256GB Internal Storage
- 8GB RAM
- 4G LTE/WiFi/5G w/ Bluetooth 5.4
- GPS Enabled/Dual Band/CDMA Band
Total Wireless 5G Plan - Unlimited Data/Talk/Text
- Covered by the Verizon 5G Network
- Price Guaranteed for 5-Years w/ Taxes/Fees Included
- No Contracts
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Activated okay. $3 to GV to port the number out (pretty BS, but cheap enough, I guess). Then got a call yesterday (Wednesday) from TW customer service, saying that my old provider was giving them issues on porting the number over, because the address was incorrect. So I gave her my address, and magically, it worked! Yep, same address I originally gave them. **sigh**
Now just waiting for the number to port over. But since I activated on the 15th, when it showed up, I'll be holding them to unlocking it 60 days from that date.
Though the order was expected to ship promptly, it did not. I contacted Total Wireless support multiple times via phone and chat, and spoke with several representatives who assured me the device would arrive within 3 to 5 days. Those assurances proved false, and after many weeks of delay, I gave up and switched to a different carrier.
To my surprise, the order arrived on July 8—over six weeks late and far beyond its intended usefulness. I reached out again to initiate a return and request a refund.
During a chat session, the representative told me the return shipping would be free and that he would send me a shipping label. Initially, he pasted only a return address—not a proper barcoded label. When I clarified the difference, he responded: "We will send you the shipping label to your email. Just print it out." However, in the very next message—without giving even a second for the label to arrive—he wrote, "I've been waiting for an hour for you to receive the label in your email." This was clearly untrue and misleading. He then abruptly closed the chat with: "Thank you for chatting with Total Wireless, have a good day! Bye!" without confirming whether my issue had been resolved. No label ever arrived.
I continued to seek resolution. The next day, a representative told me to physically deliver the box to your warehouse in Indiana—an unreasonable and impractical request given the distance. That call ended abruptly. On a third attempt, another representative insisted I would have to pay for the return shipping myself, contradicting what I had previously been told.
Though the order was expected to ship promptly, it did not. I contacted Total Wireless support multiple times via phone and chat, and spoke with several representatives who assured me the device would arrive within 3 to 5 days. Those assurances proved false, and after many weeks of delay, I gave up and switched to a different carrier.
To my surprise, the order arrived on July 8—over six weeks late and far beyond its intended usefulness. I reached out again to initiate a return and request a refund.
During a chat session, the representative told me the return shipping would be free and that he would send me a shipping label. Initially, he pasted only a return address—not a proper barcoded label. When I clarified the difference, he responded: "We will send you the shipping label to your email. Just print it out." However, in the very next message—without giving even a second for the label to arrive—he wrote, "I've been waiting for an hour for you to receive the label in your email." This was clearly untrue and misleading. He then abruptly closed the chat with: "Thank you for chatting with Total Wireless, have a good day! Bye!" without confirming whether my issue had been resolved. No label ever arrived.
I continued to seek resolution. The next day, a representative told me to physically deliver the box to your warehouse in Indiana—an unreasonable and impractical request given the distance. That call ended abruptly. On a third attempt, another representative insisted I would have to pay for the return shipping myself, contradicting what I had previously been told.
Though the order was expected to ship promptly, it did not. I contacted Total Wireless support multiple times via phone and chat, and spoke with several representatives who assured me the device would arrive within 3 to 5 days. Those assurances proved false, and after many weeks of delay, I gave up and switched to a different carrier.
To my surprise, the order arrived on July 8—over six weeks late and far beyond its intended usefulness. I reached out again to initiate a return and request a refund.
During a chat session, the representative told me the return shipping would be free and that he would send me a shipping label. Initially, he pasted only a return address—not a proper barcoded label. When I clarified the difference, he responded: "We will send you the shipping label to your email. Just print it out." However, in the very next message—without giving even a second for the label to arrive—he wrote, "I've been waiting for an hour for you to receive the label in your email." This was clearly untrue and misleading. He then abruptly closed the chat with: "Thank you for chatting with Total Wireless, have a good day! Bye!" without confirming whether my issue had been resolved. No label ever arrived.
I continued to seek resolution. The next day, a representative told me to physically deliver the box to your warehouse in Indiana—an unreasonable and impractical request given the distance. That call ended abruptly. On a third attempt, another representative insisted I would have to pay for the return shipping myself, contradicting what I had previously been told.
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All in all a great deal if i can just cancel /port the line after 2 months and the phone is unlocked.
(The HSN/QVC bundles will often include one as a separate "bonus accessory" along with an inexpensive cover, but that's about it).
Today is the 60th day and it was unlocked this morning
I haven't removed the SIM card in 60 days
I used calls and texts once every 2-3 days
55+10 =$65
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