Contract-free mobile operator VOXI, which is the virtual operator sibling of Vodafone UK, has doubled the data on their two entry-level plans for customers who order between now and 4th May 2023. As a result, you now get 30GB for just £10 per month and 60GB for £15 per month on a 30-day term.
Both plans are 5G-ready (mobile broadband) and include unlimited calls, unlimited texts, unlimited social media (i.e. Twitter, Facebook usage won’t eat into your data allowance) and support for WiFi Calling, 4G Calling, and Visual Voicemail. The 60GB plan also adds unlimited video (i.e. stream video apps endlessly).
These companies say they have to put the prices up by RPI + 3.7% because more people are using more data, then what do they do? they give you more data for free, what a joke!!!!!
They lie a lot
Unlimited down to £30 from £35.
Go with Talkmobile which Vodafone dont advertise its more value for money you get more data then on voxi.
Im with Talkmobile paying £9.95 for 100GB
Interesting. Might give 1pMobile a try then. Never had EE before due to their contract lengths. I just wanted to see if I’d get their speeds in the places I go.
O2 always had best signal coverage for me, very slow but stable.
Had Vodafone at one point which was fast in city centre but a bit patchy further out.
Same what I’m on great deal but there phone contracts are pricey when u upgrade
Lebara is the best value virtual network on Vodafone IMO, has 5g, Wi-Fi calling, VoLTE, no speed throttling and there are frequent extremely cheap deals available.
I’ve not paid more than £1 per month in the couple of years I’ve been when them, always had unlimited calls and SMS, plus at least 10 GB of data allowance per month (currently 94p for 15 GB, was just 1p for 12 GB last time).
Only detractions are no visual voicemail, no eSIM and having to port out and in again every six months or so, to retain the extremely cheap prices and my number.
Plusnet mobile used to have 25 GB for £10 on a 30-day contract and 30GB on a 12 month contract. But they stopped all sales and upgrades a few days ago, pending some “exciting news”
The exciting news is that BT group management have stopped Plusnet selling MVNO plans, meaning that over time Plusnet customers will either have to find another mobile provider, or be forced onto the expensive EE plans. Presumably BT will also be looking for ways to charge third party MVNO providers a lot more as well, and with no effective regulator, they may well succeed.
Are you excited? Plusnet think you should be,