on 05-06-2014 22:59
on 05-06-2014 22:59
when the contract runs out at the end of your plan ive just found out that o2 will carry on billing you regardless, unless you give 30 days notice,o2 cannot charge you for out of date contracts as there is no legal binding after the end date,check out BBC watchdog for more info on this and other related infomation .
on 07-06-2014 22:53
on 07-06-2014 22:53
on 08-06-2014 06:38
I have the Ts & Cs on screen in front of me - no mention of rolling contracts.
I think the problem is that I assumed the 'contract' was the agreement that I'd pay for so many months and thus the contract would lapse after this time. The Ts&Cs seem to imply that the agreement/contract continues until terminated by me (or by O2 in certain circs). This was not made clear at the sign-up stage!
on 08-06-2014 10:04
on 08-06-2014 10:04
on 08-06-2014 12:49
on 08-06-2014 12:59
on 08-06-2014 12:59
I've highlighted the relevant part for you:
3. How long this Agreement lasts
Taken from here http://www.o2.co.uk/termsandconditions/mobile/our-latest-pay-monthly-mobile-agreement
on 08-06-2014 19:17
Yes as I said above I've read the Ts&Cs thanks. What confused me was the advice on the support page here:http://www.o2.co.uk/help/bills-and-payment/cancelling-your-o2-contract#qs
- which seems to imply the 30 days notice only applies 'in contract' as they put it. In fact according to the Ts&Cs the contract runs for ever untill specifically terminated whereas that page uses the terms 12, 18 and 24 month contract in the sense I initially understood it i.e. a fixed term contract. In that sense I was assuming that once it (the 12, 18 or 24 months) had expired I should be free to do what I want. Apparently not. That page should be revised I think.
Talk about moving to a rolling one month contract is just confusing things.
Thanks to all for advice!
on 08-06-2014 19:19
on 08-06-2014 19:27
on 08-06-2014 19:27