on 27-07-2019 08:02
I was shocked, alarmed and angered by a message sent to me by O2 yesterday saying "We've noticed your usage recently has been mostly in our Europe Zone lately." Can anyone suggest here what 'recently' and 'mostly' might mean here? I have been in the UK only since the middle of June and this is now late July; so, recently I have been 'entirely' not in O2's so called Europe Zone.
Nobody at any point from within O2 had informed me about a 'Fair Use Policy' and now I'm being threatened by it and being told that my behaviour is 'unfair'! An absolute disgrace.
I have lived in Spain for more than 9 years so O2 had plenty warning that this customer is likely to be "Using our services in our Europe Zone for more than 63 whole days, in any four month period." Yet, this is the first I've heard of it. Further more I tend not to use my O2 phone when I'm in Spain because I have a Yoigo service and a seperate phone for it there.
Has anybody else here been sent one of these messages from O2?
Really angry about this and about the tone suggesting that I am being unfair and abusive.
Neil
on 27-07-2019 08:24
on 27-07-2019 08:38
on 27-07-2019 08:45
on 27-07-2019 08:45
You will get one of these messages if O2 think you are 'abusing the system' in the EU about Fair usage
https://www.o2.co.uk/termsandconditions/mobile/o2-consumer-fair-usage-policy
You may only use our services in our Europe Zone (excluding the UK) for periodic travel, like holidays or short breaks. Your data usage may be limited in our Europe Zone (excluding the UK) at a lower level than you data allowance in the UK if you’re a Pay As You Go customer. Once you go over this limit you’ll be charged. For these limits and charges please see www.o2.co.uk/help/pay-as-you-go/roaming-in-europe.
What to avoid: Using our services for the first time outside of the UK, using a large volume of your allowance (be that text, calls or data) in our Europe Zone (excluding the UK), or using our services and travelling within our Europe Zone (excluding the UK) for prolonged periods which don’t follow reasonable consumer holiday and travel patterns and behaviour. If you use our services outside the UK in our Europe Zone for 63 or more days in any four month period and you cannot demonstrate prevailing use and / or presence in the UK this is likely to be deemed to be an unfair use of our services. In such an event we will notify you and then after two weeks charges will apply (the “Surcharges”). For Pay Monthly and Pay As You Go customers the Surcharges are £4.50/GB for data, 3.3p/minute for calls and 1p/text for texts. These charges will cease to apply if you can subsequently demonstrate prevailing use and / or presence in the UK.
I know you say you use your O2 phone rarely, but something must have happened to trigger that warning.
If I lived abroad, I would be using a phone with a local sim, and have a PAYG O2 sim/phone for when I returned to the UK.
You can ring customer services if you disagree with anything I've posted although if you mention you live abroad that will be that I'm afraid.
Hope this helps and welcome to the forum
Veritas Numquam Perit
27-07-2019 08:45 - edited 27-07-2019 08:55
27-07-2019 08:45 - edited 27-07-2019 08:55
27-07-2019 08:53 - edited 27-07-2019 08:55
27-07-2019 08:53 - edited 27-07-2019 08:55
What changed is that I no longer switched off roaming when I landed in Spain .. that was pleasing. I used my UK phone occasionally, that was useful. I will now need to go back to micromanaging my phone use ... that is annoying enough to make me want to find out if another service provider adopts the same approach. I should note that this is an option for O2 under the EU laws, they do not need to make that decision. Moat annoying thing is that it was not mentioned up front ... nowhere in the publicity over 'End of EU Roaming charges' did it say only for holidays and short breaks ... it's only in the small print and actually only at the end of the small print. I live and work in both Spain and Scotland so my only escape from this nonsense is to use another provider. What's ludicrous is that O2 is a Telefonica company - corporate greed knows no bounds.
27-07-2019 08:56 - edited 27-07-2019 09:00
27-07-2019 08:56 - edited 27-07-2019 09:00
@Trimmer wrote:
I don't think we will be the only ones Bex2
Please read my post above yours. I have explained why this has happened.
People who live abroad (and I have friends who do) rarely use their UK phones as it works out more expensive in the long run. Roaming in the EU means just that, Roaming not living.
My friends like you, have two phones (one has a dual sim phone) Use the local sim when they are living abroad and the O2 one when they come home.
You can of course use your O2 allowances for free when abroad, though when you exceed the allotted time span for a 'holiday' you will be charged at international rates.
PS, I understand your annoyance, as I had an apartment in Spain for 38 years and visited it between 8-10 times a year....I knew I had to be very careful, although my trips were never longer than 28 days. .
Veritas Numquam Perit
27-07-2019 08:57 - edited 27-07-2019 08:58
27-07-2019 08:57 - edited 27-07-2019 08:58
The EU directive only states that some providers may apply unfair use charges ... this is an O2 choice. I think it was extremely unfair of them not to mention it until now.
27-07-2019 09:02 - edited 27-07-2019 09:09
27-07-2019 09:02 - edited 27-07-2019 09:09
@Trimmer wrote:
The EU directive only states that some providers may apply unfair use charges ... this is an O2 choice. I think it was extremely unfair of them not to mention it until now.
It hasn't been mentioned just now though @Trimmer
It has always been part of the terms and conditions since 'free' EU roaming was introduced back in 2017
I also disagree with anyone who says terms and conditions are rarely read through. They are there to be read. If people fall foul of them... then they have no-one to blame but themselves.
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 27-07-2019 09:10
on 27-07-2019 09:10
Yes, thank you, I read that, and I had read that before posting.
Actually the roaming thing does not rule out living; it's a different concept when applied to data use than when applied to walking over hills or sitting in your own living room because roaming can apply to an agreement where O2 picks up on another network through agreement when O2 service 'at home' is not avaiable. O2 has decided to apply this EU Roaming only to holidays and short term visits; a choice on their part not an EU directive. I'll be checking to see what providers have not made that choice. If I stay with O2 I'll have to micromanage my EU use ... my Spanish provider YOIGO has not bludgeoned me for spending time in Scotland.