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Verizon Introducing $20 Fee to Upgrade Your Smartphone

Verizon customers planning on upgrading to the iPhone SE or another new smartphone should do so sooner rather than later, as the U.S.'s largest carrier has outlined plans to introduce a new $20 upgrade fee starting next week.

Beginning next Monday, April 4, a new $20 flat rate charge will be applied to smartphones purchased on a Device Payment financing plan, or at full retail price, according to a leaked internal memo obtained by MacRumors.

Verizon-Upgrade-Fees
The same $20 premium will also apply to customers taking advantage of Apple's new iPhone Upgrade Program. Verizon cites "increasing support costs associated with customers switching their devices" as a reason for the new fees.

The new upgrade fees will impact all consumer accounts, as well as business accounts without an ECPD profile. Verizon's existing $40 upgrade fee for customers renewing a two-year contract with a new device remains in place.

The new $20 upgrade fee will be charged at the point of sale through direct Verizon sales channels, while the fee will be added to the customer's next bill when the smartphone is purchased through an indirect reseller.

AT&T similarly charges $15 per smartphone added or upgraded with AT&T Next, and "bring your own" devices. Sprint also charges an upgrade or activation fee up to $36 per device. T-Mobile does not have upgrade fees.

Top Rated Comments

131 months ago
Phew, I had almost gotten worried that Vzw had run out of ideas and ways to charge me for absolutely no reason!
Score: 111 Votes (Like | Disagree)
tdmd Avatar
131 months ago
Verizon cites "increasing support costs associated with customers switching their devices" as a reason for the new fees.
Support costs? what support costs? these companies should be called out for robbing their customers.
Score: 45 Votes (Like | Disagree)
exodiusprime Avatar
131 months ago
And yet T-Mobile still remains at zero. Awesome :)
Score: 38 Votes (Like | Disagree)
oneMadRssn Avatar
131 months ago
This is such nonsense, and a shining example of why telecom needs regulation.

Take SIM card out of old phone, insert it into new phone. Go online, and update the IMEI numbers if needed. How does this warrant a $20 fee?
Score: 29 Votes (Like | Disagree)
131 months ago
Yeah I'll stick with T-Mobile.
Score: 27 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Andres Cantu Avatar
131 months ago
T-Mobile's the only one who cares about their customers. There's no doubt about that.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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