When it comes to “gotcha” fees, the cellular phone industry makes travel companies look like rank amateurs.
Take what happened to P. Morgan Brown when his wife decided to take a spur-of-the-moment vacation to Indonesia. Her Verizon bill came to a staggering $8,000. Text messages home cost and astounding $2.50 each and the meter was running at an eye-popping $1.75 a minute for phone calls.
“We almost missed a mortgage payment when the auto-withdrawal for the first bill came through and wiped out our checking account,” says Brown, who works for an Internet company in Aliso Viejo, Calif. “What a waste of money.”
Stories like his are becoming more common, according to cellular industry experts — despite some governments’ best efforts to contain these exorbitant fees. “The main reason is that people are using their phones more for data than voice calls,” says Azita Arvani, a wireless industry consultant based in Los Angeles. With a conventional call, users can gauge the cost per minute and adjust their talk time. But gauging data use isn’t as straightforward. An e-mail, Web site or video can gobble up a lot more bandwidth than you’d think.
The European Union limited roaming charges two years ago. And this month, a new set of regulations go into effect that cap text message costs to 11 cents, limit data rates to a reasonable €1 per megabyte, and boost requirements for billing transparency. No comparable laws have been proposed in the United States, where the guiding philosophy behind this almost total lack of regulation is that market forces alone will stop wireless carriers from overbilling their customers.
Here’s one way those market forces work: Brown dropped Verizon at his first opportunity and signed up with AT&T. He doesn’t auto-pay his cell phone bills anymore and rents a cell phone when he’s abroad. “My American cell phone is now for strict emergencies,” he adds.
There’s probably only one way wireless companies could make more from their roaming fees, and that’s they printed money in their basement. A recent Harris Interactive survey found international roaming fees cost U.S. businesses an average of $693 per trip per traveler. In Europe, the typical wireless company generates between 3 percent and 10 percent of their revenue — an annual total of 5 billion euro a year — through roaming fees, according to the GSM Association.
Why? Because they can, says Ken Grunski, President of San Diego, Calif.-based wireless company Telestial. “When you roam, you are using your phone on another company’s network, not the network of your own wireless company,” he says. “These other companies generally charge high wholesale charges to your company for using their network.”
In other words, it doesn’t actually cost $2 a minute to use another wireless company — not to that carrier, not even to yours. It’s almost pure profit.
But what can you do?
I asked myself that very question after landing in Vancouver recently. I had fired up my AT&T iPhone, called home to tell everyone I’d landed safely. I had checked out the roaming rates on the ATT.com site before leaving, and they seemed pretty reasonable. I assumed they would apply to me. Wrong. After checking a few e-mail messages, a friend warned that AT&T would charge me a bundle if I didn’t have a calling plan that included Canada.
Once I checked into my hotel — which offered free wireless service, thank goodness — I did a little research and found scores of AT&T customers who had paid thousands of dollars in unexpected roaming fees. I could feel the color draining from my face. I contacted AT&T immediately, told a representative I was turning off my cell phone, and said I was deeply concerned about my next phone bill.
Don’t let this happen to you. Here are a few strategies you can use to make sure you aren’t hammered by these ridiculous fees:
1. Buy another phone
If you’re going to be away for a while, maybe you need a native cell phone. Bruce Molsky, a musician based in Washington, buys a network-unlocked phone when he travels overseas. “The total charges are usually less than a quarter of what AT&T would have charged,” he says. “Plus I have the luxury of making and receiving calls in the country I’m in for normal rates.”
2. Get a plan
If you’re attached to your cell phone — and let’s face it, if your life is on your phone, you probably are — or if it’s just a short trip, then you might consider keeping your phone but switching to an overseas calling plan. “You should be able to switch to that plan on a temporary basis which would give you favorable rates abroad,” says Mark Asnes, the executive vice president and chief operating officer of the cellular company Wireless Zone. Typically, the rates are between 99 cents and $1.99 per minute. (Still not cheap, but about half what you’d pay if you were plan-less.)
3. Go VOIP
Voice Over IP — using a PC or other Internet-connected device to make phone calls — is a popular alternative to making cell phone calls overseas. Michael Brein, a psychologist based in Honolulu, uses a VOIP service called Skype to make inexpensive phone when he’s in Europe. “So long as you have wireless access, then calling from your laptop to phone numbers using Skype-out can be as little as two cents a minute,” he says. He’s also downloaded a Skype app for his iPhone, which allows him to make VOIP calls when he’s near a high-speed wireless network.
4. Swap cards
You might be able to have it both ways — that is, keep your phone and get a lower rate than the one offered by your wireless carrier. Andy Abramson, who edits a telephony blog swaps out the SIM cards on his phone when he travels. A SIM card, shorthand for a Subscriber Identity Module, effectively lets you change your phone number to a local one when you’re traveling. “I buy local SIMs in country or a travel SIM from SIM4Travel or MaxRoam,” he says. “Both offer competitive rates.”
5. Leave your phone home
It’s the only way to be absolutely sure. The moment you power up your phone, you’re in danger of passively checking e-mails or voice mails and incurring unconscionable roaming charges. So the best way of avoiding overseas roaming charges is to not bring your handset at all.
Which isn’t to say you can’t fight these fees. Steven Frischling, a New York travel consultant, returned from a recent trip to Detroit to find a $500 international phone bill. “I was unaware that my T-Mobile Blackberry was repeatedly hitting the GSM towers across the river in Canada,” he recalls. But after supplying T-Mobile with sufficient documentation that he was in Michigan, the wireless carrier corrected his bill.
My run-in with AT&T had a happy ending, too. After a month or two of polite correspondence with a customer service representative, the charges were promptly removed “as a courtesy.”
Next time, the iPhone stays home.
My husband and I took a trip to Jamaica last summer. We took our phones with us for emergencies only (we have AT&T). We never once answered it or sent a text message. HOWEVER, we were charged EVERY time our calls went to voicemail. In the end, it only ended up costing us $20, but I was absolutely flabbergasted that we were charged for such a thing. When I tried to get the charges removed, AT&T refused.
"in the United States, where the guiding philosophy behind this almost total lack of regulation is that market forces alone will stop wireless carriers from overbilling their customers."
When will we ever learn that it's total BS that the "market forces" will take care of everything?!
Amen. All it does is a creation of cartels which create an uniform standard where it becomes an one-sided deal in favor of big corporations. Ever read your contract of anything? It always says "we have the right to change the plan at any time at our discretion," "you agree to settle all matters through arbitration," etc. etc.
In layman's terms, they are all saying "we can screw you as much as we want and if you don't like it, go somewhere else, we don't care because it's the same everywhere else! Haw-Haw (voice of Nelson Muntz)!"
What we are left with is five-year old Japanese and European technology slapped up as new-and-improved stateside (ooh, 3.2 MP on the iPhone! So impressive. Let's see the latest Japanese phone has 10MP and it comes with xenon flash, a smaller digital camera facing the caller for video calls...oh did I mention it also charges under the sun and it's also waterproof?) and outdated technology to skim us with $$$ as much as we can (Europe and Japan has free over-the-air broadcast digital TV on their cell phones, we're left with streaming TV through data because US companies are too greedy to offer stuff like that for free off the airwaves).
No way will we get legislation to protect people in the US as they are doing in Europe. The US is stocked with the best legislators that money can buy, and the telephone companies are investing huge amounts of money to ensure their exorbitant charges continue.
Her Verizon bill came to a staggering $8,000. Text messages home cost and astounding $2.50 each and the meter was running at an eye-popping $1.75 a minute for phone calls.
Did anyone do the math?? That's 1,000 text messages for $2,500 and about 2,667 minutes of talking for $5,500. Why did they go on vacation?
This article is useless! Anyone traveling outside the country that doesn't check into the roaming costs of their phone is stupid, period. By now everybody with a mobile phone knows that that are/can be roaming charges, so they should educate themselves on what those charges are and when they apply.
Europe has the right idea. What good are "market forces" when the only alternatives are OTHER companies with their own outrageous, unregulated forms of legalized extortion and robbery? Have we forgotten so soon what "market forces" have done to our nation's economy, and just how much those "bailouts" of market-force failures have cost our citizens?
And it's not just the cell phone companies that are gouging the American public. It appears that, relative to citizens in every other country in the world, Americans are charged way more for things like text books, prescription drugs, medical care, etc. and our government continues to let them get away with it. Why?
You can't fix stupid.
"gee, dear, lets use our cell phone in Asia, we have 1400 minutes and unlimited text"
"Do you think we should read the contract to see if we are coverred overseas?"
"nah, we have service everywhere according to the carrier"
Stupid is as stupid does. Why would ANYONE think that their US cell contract would cover them overseas? Does your insurance, health or otherwise cover you? No. Is your drivers license valid? No. Give me a break. Ignorance is NOT a cell company taking advantage of you. . .
Take the darn SIMcard out, put in one from the country you are in and most incoming calls in most nations are free. data for text can be purchased as well. so AFTER they get the $8k bill they learn about simcards and roaming charges. Gosh, no wonder people think Americans are stupid.
Believe me, it happens more than you think. I used to work for T-Mobile; I remember MANY times when people would call throwing a screaming fit because of huge bills from overseas calling. I would calmly explain that the charges for international calling were always available on the web, or they could've avoided it by calling us. I heard the "But we have nationwide calling, we shouldn't have been charged roaming" excuse more times I can count....people, Nationwide means INSIDE THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES!! I would even have people that DID call, I would explain the charges in detail, and many times I would get that same person back on the phone a month later crying because they had ignored what I said, used their phone the same way they do here, and got whacked with a huge bill. We can sit here and argue that it isn't fair until the cows come home; I agree, it isn't fair, it's stupid, etcetcetc...but we reap what we sow. We don't want government in our healthcare.....that would be socialism (please note I say this with a great deal of sarcasm), but we are ok with the government regulating our cell phones and cable tv, because we NEED those, it's un-American that we should actually have to take the time to find out what we are being charged.
I'm not sure about overseas, but Boost Mobile just came out with a new plan.
For $50 a month you get free everything. Free unlimited calling all over the United Stated 24 hours a day 7 days a week, free unlimited text messaging, free walki talki, and free internet. I even use my phone as a modem for my laptop when I'm on the road even on the interstate or in places where I can't normally get internet.
I have had the plan for about six months now and have been real pleased with it. I think it's called Boost Unlimited.
Anyone who can afford a 'spur of the moment' trip to Indonesia obviously has more money than brains. She proved that by spending more time on the phone back home (4500 texts or 50 hours of calls) than 'vacationing'. Once again Americans prove that they will continue to throw money away as fast as they can just because they want to or because they can!
I've always used my phone while travelling, and have arranged for plans before I leave. It's still not cheap, but not exorbitant. I'm Canadian and go to Canada all of the time and have a plan for there, but even still there are roaming charges. Yet Canadians can get plans that allow free roaming while in the USA and free long-distance calls to the USA. The other way around is not possible (with any carrier that I've tried).
When I went to Argentina and called up t-mobile beforehand to ask about plans, the representative basically told me the best thing to do was to leave my phone off and use it only when really necessary. He told me that even allowing the phone to ring without answering will result in roaming charges.
I'm a believer in market forces, but free enterprise fails in a situation like this because cell phone service depends on a limited public resource: radio frequencies. These frequencies are limited and expensive, posing substantial barriers to companies that would like to enter the market.
Therefore, I think that it is quite appropriate to regulate the industry and rates. Unfortunately, this country has difficulty in balancing its regulatory efforts. It either has too light of a touch, rendering the whole point moot, or is too heavy-handed, stifling innovation and discouraging investments in new technology.
If you're going to be out of town for a while, go to the nearest Walmart and buy a Tracfone ($15) and 60 minutes of airtime ($20). It goes further than you might think. When you're done with it just pitch it or donate it to a good cause.
Travelling international? If you have money to go overseas you either have the money for the phone bill, the brains to call your carrier first, or both.
Why on Earth are people wasting their time texting when they're ON VACATION???? If I'm with my husband or family, I turn my phone off for the entire trip (except to maybe check weather.) We use the computer to check reservations, etc. I'm on vacation to leave my world behind, and that includes texting.
I guess I'm just an old-fashioned girl who thinks enjoying the time and money spent on a vacation is worth it. There's NOTHING more important than what I'm doing right now when I'm on vacation. Sorry, I just am not that interested in the world I left behind.
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