Rollover minutes – great gimmick

When I signed up with AT&T for my iPhone, I got the lowest number of minutes I could get, 450 per month as I don’t talk on the phone much. AT&T has rollover minutes which will let me rollover the minutes I don’t use until the next month and they add up for a year. Well, most people have pretty consistent phone usage, so if they get a plan that has more minutes than they need, the rollover minutes start adding up and will never be used.

I’m about half way through my billing cycle and I’ve used 23 any time minutes. At this rate, I’ll use maybe 50. If I keep this up for 12 months, I’ll have almost 5000 rollover minutes. For someone that doesn’t make voice calls all that often, what am I going to do with that many minutes? Effectively I’ll never go over my minutes. Too bad I can’t cash them in at the end of the year for a prize or a discount!

Rollover minutes sound great in commercials, but serve very little practical purpose. Yes, I realize that there are some people that may have unexpected phone calls one month and it will help, but for those people that are always way under their minutes, it’s useless.

One Reply to “Rollover minutes – great gimmick”

  1. You know, it’s really funny to think about how little I talk on my phone as well. I use my phone constantly, but really as a mini laptop for keeping up with everything while I’m at work or not at home in general. And if I do end up talking, it’s usually at night or on the weekend and the minutes are free at that point anyway. I could really benefit from a 100 minute plan, I should suggest that to Verizon.

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