Skip to main content

Verizon dropping unlimited smartphone data plans

verizon-wireless
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although Verizon Wireless still hasn’t made it official, Verizon Wireless has confirmed that the company will shift from offering unlimited smartphone data plans to a tiered pricing scheme beginning July 7. Although existing customers with unlimited plans (and anyone who gets in the door by July 7) won’t be impacted, new customers will be paying a minimum of $30 a month for 2 GB of data.

Verizon Wireless’s new plans will have three tiers. The first will offer 2 GB of data transfer a month for $30. For folks with bigger data needs, the company will also offer a 5 GB plan for $50 per month, and a 10 GB plan for $80 per month. All three plans will bill overages at $10 per gigabyte per month

Recommended Videos

Some feature phone customers will also be eligible for a lower-cost data plan enabling up to 75 MB of transfer for $10 per month, or a $1.99 per megabyte pay-per-use plan.

According to sources at Verizon Wireless, adding mobile hotspot service to a smartphone package will cost an additional $20 per month on top of one of the three smartphone service plans, with overages billed at $20 per 2GB of additional data. Customers who already have Verizon’s unlimited LTE hotspot plan will apparently be able to retain that functionality for $30 per month.

Verizon’s conversion to tiered data plans has been expected since last year. AT&T converted to tier-based data plans in June 2010, and T-Mobile degrades data service for customers that go over plan limits. Verizon’s move leaves Sprint as the only major wireless operator with unlimited data plans.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Your Verizon plan just got a major overhaul — here’s what’s new
verizon myplan unlimited plans huge overhaul news skateboarder logo

Verizon's mobile plans are being restructured to provide customers with the flexibility to choose only the perks they actually plan to use — and save money in the process.

Although Verizon’s plans have always packed in a lot of extras, the company candidly admits that these have become “bloated bundles” that force folks to pay for a bunch of services they may not want or need. This week, Verizon announced it’s leaving that “one-size-fits-all” approach behind to allow customers to build the bundle of services and perks they want.
Verizon’s myPlan

Read more
Verizon’s cheapest 5G unlimited plan just got even cheaper
Verizon banner splashed across iPhone screen.

Verizon is one of the top service providers in the world, and now it's sweetening the deal on its cheapest unlimited 5G plan. Currently, Verizon offers a handful of different service options, with the Welcome Unlimited plan being its cheapest.

An end-of-the-year deal, however, is reducing the price of the Welcome Unlimited plan even further by $5 per month per line — making it one of the cheapest unlimited 5G plans on the market.

Read more
How to use Advanced Data Protection on your iPhone (and why you should)
Enabling Advanced Data Protection on an iPhone

Apple's new Advanced Data Protection is one of the most notable changes to arrive with the iOS 16.2 update. Simply put, this tier of data safety enables end-to-end encryption for a wider variety of data stored on your iCloud account. End-to-end encryption is the most robust form of mass-market data protection protocol that is currently available out there.

Services like iMessage have relied on it for a while, but so far, it hasn't been available for other kinds of sensitive data like photos and voice notes saved on your iCloud drive. Apple is finally changing that with the rollout of Advanced Data Protection with the iOS 16.2 update.

Read more