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Verizon undercuts its own lowest price with 2GB postpaid plan for $40 a month

verizon cuts off rural customers just ate time warner v2
gt8073a/Flickr
Verizon, apparently not content with introducing one disruptive data plan, introduced another this week. On Monday, the U.S.’s largest carrier announced a new postpaid option that starts at $40 a month — a full $10 cheaper than the lowest-priced plan it previously sold.

The plan is relatively no-frills, as you might expect. Customers, who pay upfront, get unlimited texting, calling, and 2GB of data per month, down slightly from the 5GB offered on its $50 prepaid plan.

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That’s significantly less expensive than Verizon’s postpaid subscription plans. The cheapest, which starts at $55, includes 2GB of data per month. And it comes with benefits like Always-On Data, which allows you to download files at a reduced rate of 128kbps after you’ve exceeded your data cap, and CarryOver data, which lets customers roll over unused data for one month.

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But it’s more expensive that comparable plans from its biggest competitors. Sprint’s Boost Mobile prepaid brand offers a 2GB plan for $30 a month, while AT&T’s Cricket Wireless and T-Mobile’s MetroPCS sell 1 GB tiers for $30. T-Mobile offers $40 a month for 3GB and an unadvertised $50 a month for 5GB. And AT&T offers a $40 for 4GB.

The new plan come of the heels of Verizon’s new unlimited data plan, which starts at $70 a month and includes unlimited texts, calls, plus 10GB of mobile hot spot data. It kick-started something of a trend: Last week, Sprint and T-Mobile dropped restrictions on their data plans and AT&T reintroduced unlimited data for customers who haven’t purchased a DirecTV or U-Verse package.

It’s a postpaid dichotomy, Fortune notes. Increasingly, carriers are splitting offerings into two distinct camps: Data-plus family and individual plans on the high end, and constricted data plans on the low end. T-Mobile, for example, recently eliminated its least expensive regular monthly plans, leaving customers with the stark choice of opting for unlimited plan starting at $70 a month or switching to MetroPCS.

There’s logic behind the industry’s effort — family plans and heavy data plan users are likely to spend more for a larger buckets of data. But competition’s helped to drive down prices. AT&T and Verizon reduced the price of high-data plans to bring them in line with Sprint and T-Mobile’s low-cost unlimited tiers. And now, every major carrier offers an unlimited data plan for $100 or less a month.

See more at Verizon

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
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