on 05-03-2022 12:28
Hi,
Having been notified of price increase, I looked to cancel contract by paying off device payment. But the monthly payment is "combined" so no split phone/airtime. As such to pay off would be x number of months total monthly cost.
Question- if I end the contract 6 months early by paying combined monthly payment x 6, for as per ts and cs? - will I still get the airtime usage as it's being paid
Thanks
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on 05-03-2022 12:31
Unfortunately not, that's the downside of not having a refresh contract.
on 05-03-2022 12:31
Unfortunately not, that's the downside of not having a refresh contract.
on 05-03-2022 12:33
on 05-03-2022 12:33
Thank you. Surely this must be somewhat illegal no? Paying for a product early but not being entitled to receive? Sorry I'm clueless
on 05-03-2022 12:36
on 05-03-2022 12:36
Not illegal but maybe immoral, but in defence of O2, they introduced refresh to stop this from happening.
on 05-03-2022 12:44
on 05-03-2022 12:44
Is a refresh account standard? I don't recall having this as an option when purchasing 3 prior to Christmas. Although it seems that would have been perfect in this situation. Can it be transferred into?
05-03-2022 13:45 - edited 05-03-2022 13:46
05-03-2022 13:45 - edited 05-03-2022 13:46
@LandAB02 wrote:Is a refresh account standard? I don't recall having this as an option when purchasing 3 prior to Christmas. Although it seems that would have been perfect in this situation. Can it be transferred into?
A Refresh contract is completely different to a Standard contract.
Refresh is where you pay for the phone and airtime separately (with 2 payments coming out of your bank) Standard contract is where the cost of the phone and airtime is combined. You can't upgrade until contract end. With Refresh you can do anything once the device is paid off. @LandAB02
No, you can't transfer to Refresh once you have taken out a standard contract.
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 05-03-2022 14:35
on 05-03-2022 14:35
@LandAB02 Cancelling your contract because of the price increase is an exercise in futility. All the networks put their prices up this time of year, so you'll most likely be no better off switching. You should also consider whether your signal strength in the places you frequent most would be any better with another network. That should always be the prime consideration when choosing a provider rather than price.