on 19-10-2016 11:38
Beware when in Rhodes Greece O2 have charged me for roaming inTurkey. They refuse to budge and more or less say it is my fault. I have been with them for nearly 20 years and now will cancel both my contracts and go with BT
Solved! Go to Solution.
19-10-2016 11:43 - edited 19-10-2016 11:44
19-10-2016 11:43 - edited 19-10-2016 11:44
Inadvertent Roaming
Accidental roaming (sometimes known as inadvertent roaming) might occur if you are in an area close to national borders because your phone picks up the network across the border. If this happens, you may be charged as though you were roaming on the network across the border. You can prevent this if you live near a national border by setting your handset to do a manual network selection (as opposed to an automatic network selection) and select the O2 network. This way if you lose the O2 network your handset will not automatically try to connect you to an alternate network. For advice, please visit your nearest O2 store.
Source: http://www.o2.co.uk/international/travel/standard-charges/payandgo
http://www.o2.co.uk/international/travel/standard-charges
on 19-10-2016 11:42
19-10-2016 11:43 - edited 19-10-2016 11:44
19-10-2016 11:43 - edited 19-10-2016 11:44
Inadvertent Roaming
Accidental roaming (sometimes known as inadvertent roaming) might occur if you are in an area close to national borders because your phone picks up the network across the border. If this happens, you may be charged as though you were roaming on the network across the border. You can prevent this if you live near a national border by setting your handset to do a manual network selection (as opposed to an automatic network selection) and select the O2 network. This way if you lose the O2 network your handset will not automatically try to connect you to an alternate network. For advice, please visit your nearest O2 store.
Source: http://www.o2.co.uk/international/travel/standard-charges/payandgo
http://www.o2.co.uk/international/travel/standard-charges
on 19-10-2016 11:48
on 19-10-2016 11:48
on 19-10-2016 12:16
on 19-10-2016 12:16
Always best to research and look at the international pages before you trave. 20 minutes and you are fully aware of what you need to do.
on 06-07-2017 13:57
on 06-07-2017 13:57
I'm not sure how they even have a leg to stand on.
Yes you can put 'accidental roaming in'. But there's no accident here. I was standing in Greece during my 6 days abroad and charged twice for being Turkey which is quite obvously not the case. In terms and conditions they state that if you are travelling to Rhodes, Greece then you will not incur roaming charges. Whilst in Rhodes I was charged therefore they are in breach of their terms and conditions as it's their signal that has the problem, not my phone's. Trust me I'll be arguing this one until i get my money back.
on 06-07-2017 14:04
on 06-07-2017 14:04
@Anonymous wrote:Trust me I'll be arguing this one until i get my money back.
They most likely will reimburse you as a goodwill gesture, but everyone really needs to be aware of the signal their phone has latched on to if in Auto mode and take the appropriate action where necessary.
"Accidental roaming" is a standard industry term for when a phone latches onto a stronger signal from a neighbouring country. So it's perfectly valid.
If I were you, I would be polite and humble with your discussions with customer service as this is more likely to reap rewards.
Good luck and welcome to the forum
06-07-2017 14:18 - edited 06-07-2017 14:21
Well then they completely contradict themselves then don't they? You can't on one hand say, "If you go to Greece then you will not incur roaming charges" and then say "but stand in the middle of that country or we might charge you".
I've already spoken to someone on live chat and my case has been put through to the customer servies department. There's being polite and humble and then there's being charged for going to Turkey when I was in Greece, which is divided by a small part of the Mediterranean, but yes, I understand what you are saying.
"Everyone needs to be aware?" It needs to be made blatantly obvious. You can't take appropriate action as by the time you've turned your phone on its already connected.
on 06-07-2017 14:33
on 06-07-2017 14:33
on 07-10-2017 14:14
on 07-10-2017 14:14
I have just experienced this. I went to Croatia, got a text from O2Roaming saying 'Welcome to Croatia' and confirming that all charges would be as per my UK contract. I get home to receive a bill for using my phone in Bosnia. No text from O2 to say 'Welcome to Bosnia' so I merrily carried on using my phone thinking I was still in Croatia (which I was). If I'd received a text saying O2 thought I was in Bosnia, I'd have manually changed my provider to a Croatian one.