Verizon has for
New Verizon Customers:
4 Lines Unlimited Welcome Plan for
$100/month ($25/month each line; after bill credits are applied w/ Auto Pay & paper-free billing discounts of $10 per line) +
4-Count 256 GB Apple iPhone 17 Pro or 256GB Samsung Galaxy S25+ for $0/month (after 36-mo. bill credits are applied) +
$300 Verizon Gift Card when you
follow the instructions below.
Shipping is free.
Thanks Community Member
minhtrimatrix for sharing this deal
Note: You'll pay $0.00/mo after a credit of up to $30.55/mo on your billed price. One-time activation fee of $40 per device will apply. The total you pay today will be the sales tax on the $1099.99 retail price of 4x 256 GB Apple iPhone 17 Pro.
Deal Instructions:
- Click here for 256 GB Apple iPhone 17 Pro or Click here for 256GB Samsung Galaxy S25+
- Select 256GB Storage Option and Select Color
- Select Payment Option - Monthly with Verizon ($0.00 for 36 months)
- Click Add to cart for each device
- Click Next steps
- Scroll down and select the Unlimited Welcome plan and then continue
- Click Next
- Select Continue without Offers
- Select No thanks to No Device Protection (Decline all device protection)
- Click Continue
- Click Edit your number and add your phone number under bring a number and select no, I don't have it. (Select Save changes)
- Continue onto the next page, which is where you repeat and add the 3 additional Apple iPhone 17 or S25+ of your choice by clicking "Keep Shopping"
- When finalizing checkout, wait a minute or two for a popup to appear for a $300 Verizon Gift Card
- Note: Ensure any ad-blockers or pop-up blockers are turned off.
- At final checkout, you should have 4 Lines of Unlimited Welcome at $30/month per line (after Auto Pay & paper-free billing discounts) w/ 4-Count 256GB Apple iPhone 17 Pro or 4-Count Samsung Galaxy S25+S25+ at $0/month for 36 months per phone (after bill credit applied to each phone) + $300 Verizon Gift Card (appears in a pop up after waiting at checkout page) with Free shipping, a One-time activation fee totaling $160 ($40 per line) will apply and will appear on your first bill.
- The total you pay today will be the sales tax on the $1099.99 retail price of 4x 256 GB Apple iPhone 17 Pro.
Bonus eGift Card Note:
- Get a $300 E-Gift card on Verizon. Complete the smartphone purchase from your cart. Redeem offer in My Verizon or vzw.com/myverizon after placing your order. You must submit for redemption within 60 days of order. Card sent via email within 8 weeks after receipt and validation of claim to the submitted email address. If service is canceled or device is returned, claim will be invalid. Gift card value charged back if account owner canceled. Verizon reserves the right to charge the amount of the Verizon e-Gift Card to your Verizon Wireless account if, within 6 months, service is canceled, or price plan changes from an eligible unlimited plan. A suspension without billing will add the time you are suspended to your 6 month chargeback window.
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- Phone sales tax- due at sign up.
- Monthly Taxes. Like someone mentioned can be as high as $9/line per month
- Activation fees. Apparently $40 per line, but maybe you can get waived?
- Verizon has historically said allow 1-2 billing cycles for discounts to appear. Well, if they don't appear be prepared to spend multiple calls and hours to try and get them to honor their agreement.
- This service plan is the lowest unlimited so don't get the ultra wideband (faster 5g) or hot spot.
- to take full advantage of the discount you have to keep the lines for 3 years. That's a long time to be locked in. Theoretical scenario: if you pulled all 4 lines out after 2 years would owe around $1500 for the phone pay offs.
While a good price, I think they are trying to get you to sign up, and then bc you'll be frustrated with the lower plan will upgrade at a significant cost ($40/line instead of $25).
This reddit post [reddit.com] explains data prioritization for the 3 major carriers and the MVNOs on them.
Fed Universal Service Charge: $0.41
Regulatory Charge: $0.21
Admin & Telco Recovery Charge: $3.78
CA State 911 Surcharge: $0.41
CA State 988 Surcharge: $0.08
CA Universal Service PPP Fee: $0.90
Emerg Comm Acc Tax: $3.22
City UUT: $0.28
Total charges per line = $9.29
It's still a really good deal if you're in the market for new iPhones
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Go to the company owned store and see what they can do to fix transfer issues. Hopefully the manager there can also update the order for store pickup of the last iPhone without changing anything on the terms and promotions.
Do register the gc for all four numbers. All the best
Verizon's 60-day phone unlocking rule, a unique requirement for the carrier to automatically unlock devices after two months, has ended as of January 2026; the FCC granted Verizon a waiver to align with standard industry practice (CTIA guidelines), allowing devices to remain locked until contract fulfillment or full payment, a change justified by Verizon citing massive fraud from criminals exploiting the shorter window for black market sales, though consumer advocates worry it hinders switching.
What the Rule Was
- Unique to Verizon: For years, Verizon automatically unlocked phones after 60 days of paid, active service, a perk not offered by other major carriers, according to Tech Between the Lines.
- Origins: This was a condition from past spectrum auctions (2008) and acquisitions (2021), where Verizon agreed to faster unlocking in exchange for licenses, notes 9to5Google and Ars Technica.
Why It Ended- Fraud: Verizon argued the 60-day window made them a target for criminals who stole phones for resale or trafficking, costing them millions and fueling crime, according to Android Headlines and Interesting Engineering.
- FCC Waiver: The FCC granted Verizon's request for a waiver in January 2026, allowing them to end the requirement, states The Verge.
- Industry Uniformity: The goal is a unified industry standard, where devices are unlocked once contractual obligations (like full payment) are met, notes PhoneArena.
What It Means NowVerizon's 60-day phone unlocking rule, a unique requirement for the carrier to automatically unlock devices after two months, has ended as of January 2026; the FCC granted Verizon a waiver to align with standard industry practice (CTIA guidelines), allowing devices to remain locked until contract fulfillment or full payment, a change justified by Verizon citing massive fraud from criminals exploiting the shorter window for black market sales, though consumer advocates worry it hinders switching.
What the Rule Was
- Unique to Verizon: For years, Verizon automatically unlocked phones after 60 days of paid, active service, a perk not offered by other major carriers, according to Tech Between the Lines.
- Origins: This was a condition from past spectrum auctions (2008) and acquisitions (2021), where Verizon agreed to faster unlocking in exchange for licenses, notes 9to5Google and Ars Technica.
Why It Ended- Fraud: Verizon argued the 60-day window made them a target for criminals who stole phones for resale or trafficking, costing them millions and fueling crime, according to Android Headlines and Interesting Engineering.
- FCC Waiver: The FCC granted Verizon's request for a waiver in January 2026, allowing them to end the requirement, states The Verge.
- Industry Uniformity: The goal is a unified industry standard, where devices are unlocked once contractual obligations (like full payment) are met, notes PhoneArena.
What It Means NowI just received the $300 GC today looks like it can only be used on Verizon only.
"Activated before January 13, 2025: Your phone should still unlock automatically after 60 days. You can verify your unlock status through your Verizon account online or by calling customer service at *611."
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Verizon's 60-day phone unlocking rule, a unique requirement for the carrier to automatically unlock devices after two months, has ended as of January 2026; the FCC granted Verizon a waiver to align with standard industry practice (CTIA guidelines), allowing devices to remain locked until contract fulfillment or full payment, a change justified by Verizon citing massive fraud from criminals exploiting the shorter window for black market sales, though consumer advocates worry it hinders switching.
What the Rule Was
- Unique to Verizon: For years, Verizon automatically unlocked phones after 60 days of paid, active service, a perk not offered by other major carriers, according to Tech Between the Lines.
- Origins: This was a condition from past spectrum auctions (2008) and acquisitions (2021), where Verizon agreed to faster unlocking in exchange for licenses, notes 9to5Google and Ars Technica.
Why It Ended- Fraud: Verizon argued the 60-day window made them a target for criminals who stole phones for resale or trafficking, costing them millions and fueling crime, according to Android Headlines and Interesting Engineering.
- FCC Waiver: The FCC granted Verizon's request for a waiver in January 2026, allowing them to end the requirement, states The Verge.
- Industry Uniformity: The goal is a unified industry standard, where devices are unlocked once contractual obligations (like full payment) are met, notes PhoneArena.
What It Means NowI just received the $300 GC today looks like it can only be used on Verizon only.
I received the rebate card and PIN for the second number, but for my main number I am seeing the message below. If the main number also processes the GC emailcorrectly, I will submit the remaining lines afterward.
Also, for the people who traded in carrier phones, submission is required to receive the full promotional amount. So far, I have only received the market value of approximately $275 instead of the full trade-in EIP balance that was remaining with T-Mobile.
Date received: xxx
Status:
Valid
Status detail:
You're valid and going through final processing. Please allow up to 2 weeks to receive your rebate.
Verizon's 60-day phone unlocking rule, a unique requirement for the carrier to automatically unlock devices after two months, has ended as of January 2026; the FCC granted Verizon a waiver to align with standard industry practice (CTIA guidelines), allowing devices to remain locked until contract fulfillment or full payment, a change justified by Verizon citing massive fraud from criminals exploiting the shorter window for black market sales, though consumer advocates worry it hinders switching.
What the Rule Was
- Unique to Verizon: For years, Verizon automatically unlocked phones after 60 days of paid, active service, a perk not offered by other major carriers, according to Tech Between the Lines.
- Origins: This was a condition from past spectrum auctions (2008) and acquisitions (2021), where Verizon agreed to faster unlocking in exchange for licenses, notes 9to5Google and Ars Technica.
Why It Ended- Fraud: Verizon argued the 60-day window made them a target for criminals who stole phones for resale or trafficking, costing them millions and fueling crime, according to Android Headlines and Interesting Engineering.
- FCC Waiver: The FCC granted Verizon's request for a waiver in January 2026, allowing them to end the requirement, states The Verge.
- Industry Uniformity: The goal is a unified industry standard, where devices are unlocked once contractual obligations (like full payment) are met, notes PhoneArena.
What It Means NowSign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
It doesn't matter for folks who will stay with Verizon. Maybe a issue for folks traveling abroad as Verizon is not as good as Tmobile for travel to Europe, Asia
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