06-03-2025 16:23 - edited 06-03-2025 17:19
06-03-2025 16:23 - edited 06-03-2025 17:19
Yet again, confusing info whenever I phone Customer Services (FIVE times now!) about this.
I have an iPhone 16PM and Apple Watch Ultra (these are both owned outright; bought from Apple directly).
I have sim-only on the phone (£8/mth) and the watch as a sync device (£7/mth).
Q: How much is each part of my plan going up by?
One CS agent says increase is 1.80+0.75 (phone+watch), another contradicts insisting its 1.80+1.80 (phone+watch). So which is it?!
on 06-03-2025 16:30
It's £1.80 for the phone airtime and 75p for the watch
From the email I received
With this in mind, we want to let you know that from your April 2025 bill, the monthly cost of airtime plans will increase by £1.80 and any data only or watch plans by 75p.
on 06-03-2025 16:41
on 06-03-2025 16:41
Yes I got that on my billing email:
"...from April you will see an increase to your bill of £1.80 for airtime plans or 75p for data or watch plans..."
But also another email that said:
"New sim only tariff, for £7.00* a month
Airtime Plan initial cost:
£7.00* a month
Total monthly cost £7.00 a month
Increasing to £8.80 in Apr-2025 bill
Increasing to £10.60 in Apr-2026 bill
Airtime Plan will increase every year thereafter by £1.80 from April bill.
2024 Sim Only Smart Watch 30 day 1001 Airtime Plan
0 Minutes
0 Texts
1GB Data
Volt O2 Travel Inclusive Zone"
Contradictory?
06-03-2025 16:48 - edited 06-03-2025 17:17
06-03-2025 16:48 - edited 06-03-2025 17:17
Should also add that these price increases are WAAAAY higher than under the old system, as well!
Whoever at Ofcomm thought pounds+pence increases would be better than percentage increases, must have been smoking something!
phone: 1.80 / 8 = 22.5% increase
watch: 0.75 / 7 = 10.7% increase
both: 2.55 / 15 = 17% increase
Under the previous system, even if you got high inflation RPI rate (say 5%) + 3.9% extra = just 8.9% increase. (so 8.9% on £15 = £1.34 total increase, vs. £2.55 on new system!)
Or am I missing something?
on 06-03-2025 16:53
on 06-03-2025 16:53
I wouldn't say anything at o2 is straight forward.. and think they have confused themselves, the way I have read it is for exisiting watch contracts then it is 75p, for new watch contracts its £1.80 a year... (for a service that doesn't work)...
06-03-2025 16:59 - edited 06-03-2025 17:11
06-03-2025 16:59 - edited 06-03-2025 17:11
Thanks, Yeah as usual, c0ck-eyed info that confuses staff as much as customers. 🙄
What do you mean by this, out of interest: "...(for a service that doesn't work)..."?
Do watch plans not work for you?
on 06-03-2025 17:08
Another thing about these increases, is the percentage increase is now higher for those on cheap deals, yet lower for those on expensive ones. Very very sneaky!
eg.
cheap deal
1.80 / 8.00 = 22.5% increase
expensive deal
1.80 / 30.00 = 6% increase
So in effect, people who shopped around to get new deals via comparison sites are being forced into higher prices quicker over time, whereas legacy customers are getting slower increases over time.
No doubt very deliberately to counteract the (often sim-only) cheap deals marketplace, we're now in.
06-03-2025 17:28 - edited 06-03-2025 17:30
06-03-2025 17:28 - edited 06-03-2025 17:30
Don't forget £3.50 on Virgin Media if you signed up this year. So a simple Volt Package of Broadband and Phone goes up by £5.30
Mind you my Water rates have gone up over £200. Apparently the CEO and shareholders need a rise
06-03-2025 18:33 - edited 06-03-2025 18:38
06-03-2025 18:33 - edited 06-03-2025 18:38
Yeah, my Virgin Media broadband is on the older percentage thing of +7.5% (3.6 RPI+3.9), thus 'only' £3.26/m more. So £0.24/m or £2.88/y saved. Wow lucky me! 🙄
I'm dreading my Thames Water bill this year. If they're bankrupt (or near to), then the previous two years of 12% increases each year are likely to be nothing compared to this year's one!
on 06-03-2025 18:50
on 06-03-2025 18:50
I gave up and have gone back to a Pixel 9 Pro Fold with a Pixel watch as my personal phone, and it stopped working near enough then some things would work, then stop again..
Too much faffing...
Blame OFCOM for these price increases across all networks as those on cheap tariffs are all been screwed over