T-Mobile just raised the price of its best 'unlimited' data plan
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On Thursday, the mobile carrier raised the price of the "One Plus" add-on to its T-Mobile One "unlimited" data plan. The add-on, which adds perks like HD video streaming, now costs $10 a month; previously, it cost $5 a month. That comes on top of the $70 a month it costs to get the base One plan on a single line.
The change was first spotted by users on Reddit and later confirmed by various outlets.
The price change reflects the end of a "promo" period, a T-Mobile spokeswoman said. The updated price only applies to new customers, so those who subscribed to One Plus while it cost $5 a month (or any earlier price) will not see any changes to their bill.
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To get either of those perks - as well as unlimited in-flight WiFi from Gogo and faster international data speeds - you have to sign up for One Plus.
Verizon and AT&T's unlimited plans do not have those restrictions by default: Both allow you to stream HD video (in AT&T's case, you have to enable it through an app first) and use 10 GB of LTE mobile-hotspot data without paying extra. Sprint does the same, though its network is generally seen as spottier than the other carriers.
Verizon's plan starts at $80 a month - the same as the new One Plus plan - while AT&T's plan starts at $90 a month. Sprint's plan currently starts at $50 a month, though the company has said that is a promotional price that will end in the middle of next year. It's worth noting, however, that T-Mobile's price includes the cost of additional taxes and fees, while the other three carriers' plans do not.
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T-Mobile has quietly altered the price of the One Plus add-on multiple times since introducing it last December. It originally cost an extra $15 a month. T-Mobile briefly included the HD video and LTE mobile-hotspot perks in the $70 One plan earlier this year, but put those back behind the a paywall shortly thereafter.
A T-Mobile spokeswoman declined to say if the new $10 monthly price represents another promotional period.
T-Mobile has been the biggest beneficiary of an increasingly competitive wireless market in recent years. Though it remains well behind Verizon and AT&T in terms of total subscribers, its user base has grown at a much faster rate in recent quarters, largely on the back of an improved network and several aggressive promotions. The introduction of the One plan last year is largely seen as the catalyst for the recent revival of "unlimited" data plans at large.
Past rumors have tied it to a potential merger with Sprint, though recent reports have said that possibility is currently on hold.
With the change here, though, T-Mobile's status as a good value is a little more cloudy.
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