on 13-09-2014 10:25
on 13-09-2014 10:25
on 13-09-2014 12:37
Hmm, annoying. OK, I will cross that bridge when it comes!
For now if o2 are good enough for me in London on 4G then I will have no reason to leave
on 13-09-2014 12:40
on 13-09-2014 12:40
on 13-09-2014 13:10
on 13-09-2014 13:10
on 13-09-2014 13:25
on 13-09-2014 13:25
on 13-09-2014 13:46
on 13-09-2014 13:46
they are doing the same on all models. its out of order doing that and its unfair to the long standing customers who use o2.
ive checked other retailers and their prices are more in line with apple.
on 13-09-2014 13:55
on 13-09-2014 13:55
on 13-09-2014 14:39
on 13-09-2014 14:39
Whatever you feel most comfortable with.
on 13-09-2014 14:56
I am extremely vexed by this whole situation. I had a long chat with an O2 rep and I have now decided I will be leaving O2, after 6 years with 2 accounts and very high bills.
How can O2 justify charging £110 more than Apple? I get the idea of amortising the cost of the £619 phone over 24 months, but then why state that you will charge 0% interest? They are basically taking their customers for uneducated mugs.
If they wanted to charge that price, they could either show a 15% interest rate (Apple does this on their website) or just make the airtime portion of the bill higher. The brazen way they are charging for this means they either underestimate their customers or they don't care.
There was a time when phone companies would subsidise handsets. There was a time when loyal customers were rewarded. Unfortunately for O2, they have lost my custom. Rather than paying £1,161.99 in total for 24 months and just 2GB of data (£9.99 for the phone), I can pay for the iPhone 6 64GB outright from apple (£619) and get an all-you-can-eat data package from Three for just £18 a month. £1,051 over 24 months.
on 13-09-2014 15:03
on 13-09-2014 15:03
I ended up going for the £53 tariff with the £190 upfront cost, as this meant I end up paying £790 total for the phone - the same price as Apple sells it for.
Also, I was under the impression that O2 will unlock your phone any time during your contract: http://www.expertreviews.co.uk/mobile-phones/1400946/how-to-unlock-your-phone-on-ee-o2-three-and-vod...
on 13-09-2014 15:07
on 13-09-2014 15:07
The difference is that you have done some research @Anonymous but it's probably more that customers don't care as long as they get the latest phone with costs spread over 24 months. O2 are guilty of getting as much money as they can for the iphone. Customer apathy plays a big part by allowing O2 to do this by entering into an agreed contract.
When the phones become available on P&G via O2 then customers will not let O2 get away with it.