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Aging? Click here to shop in our newly
expanded on-line store for quality products
and items designed with Seniors in mind.
Price War comes to Cell Phones for Seniors:
Older Americans now can connect for as
little as $7 a month
AGE
urges millions of Seniors still without Cell
Phones to use tips to find the right
low-cost Wireless Company; Three
leading Wireless Companies reviewed:
Jitterbug, Consumer Cellular and Senior
Value Cell Phone
WASHINGTON, Dec.
21, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Thanks to a major price war that has
broken out among wireless companies, older
Americans can now purchase a "senior
friendly" prepaid cell phone for less than $15 and
get service for as little as $7 a
month, according to an analysis conducted by
the Senior Advocate Health & Safety Project
of the independent and nonprofit Alliance
for Generational Equality (AGE), which
represents seniors as well as Americans in
other generations.
High prices have often been cited by an
estimated 13-19 million U.S. seniors for not
taking advantage of the health, safety and
other benefits of owning a cell phone. In
response, the Senior Advocate Health &
Safety Project of the independent and
nonprofit Alliance for Generational Equality
(AGE) undertook a study of phones and plans
offered by three leading "pay as you go"
cell phone offerings aimed at older seniors:
GreatCall Jitterbug; Consumer Cellular
(which offers a discount for AARP members);
and SVC Senior Value Cell Phone by TracFone.
AGE focused only on those nationally
available wireless providers offering
inexpensive prepaid plans and "senior
friendly" phones with larger buttons,
large-number readouts and hearing-aid
compatibility.
AGE is 100 percent independent and makes no
commercial endorsements of any kind. AGE's
Senior Advocate Health & Safety Project has
been created to provide older Americans with
reliable information they can use to save
money, be healthier and live safer lives.
Looking at the three wireless options, AGE
found that SVC Senior Value Cell Phone (SVC)
had no activation fee, the least-expensive
option for service (allowing consumers to
keep their phone active for about $7 a
month, requiring only $20 in
use or payment every three months), and the
lowest-priced "senior friendly" handset, the
Samsung T155G, for $14.95.
By contrast, both Jitterbug and Consumer
Cellular require a $35 "start
up" or "activation" fee for new service,
impose higher entry points for consumers ($14.99 a
month for 50 minutes on Jitterbug and $10 a
month to maintain service on Consumer
Cellular), and more expensive "senior
friendly" handsets ($49-$79 for
Jitterbug, even though its features are very
similar to the SVC handset, and $25-$30 for
Consumer Cellular's Doro handsets).
On the other hand, the differences between
the three services are less evident for
higher-volume callers, with Jitterbug at $19.99 for
100 minutes, Consumer Cellular with $20 for
250 minutes and $19.99 for
125 minutes at SVC. Even at these levels,
the additional activation fee and higher
handset costs would offset much of the
differences between these plans, AGE noted.
All three services provide nationwide
coverage with no roaming costs, with SVC
also providing international calls to 100
destinations for the same price as local
calls (the same as its sister TracFone
brand).
David Herman,
vice president and national spokesperson,
Alliance for Generational Equity, said:
"Expensive cell phone plans no longer need
be an impediment to American seniors getting
wireless.
Older Americans who still don't have cell
phones should think seriously about taking
advantage of the aggressive price war now
going on among wireless companies to get
more seniors to take the plunge. And
for seniors who are paying too much on
pricey contract-based cell phone service and
throwing away hundreds of minutes a year,
it's a good time to think about switching to
a cheaper prepaid plan."
Mac Haddow,
senior fellow on public policy, AGE Senior
Advocate Health & Safety Project, said:
"The current price war among cell phone
plans catering to older Americans is good
news for seniors and for those who may want
to buy an affordable cell phone for a parent
or grandparent.
"What
we are seeing here is basically the
extension of prepaid cell phone prices
savings to one of the huge markets out there
– the 13-19 million older Americans who
either don't currently own a cell phone or
no longer have one. The key here is to be
a savvy shopper and get the cheapest
possible deal that meets your needs."
FIVE TIPS FOR SENIORS BUYING CELL PHONES
Go prepaid. Chances are that you don't need
what you are paying for with an expensive
contract-based cell phone. In addition to
wasting minutes every month, you also face
the threat of a major cancellation penalty
if you want to switch phones. Dump the
contract and save money by going prepaid.
Never buy more phone than you need.
If you don't need an iPhone, Blackberry or
Android smartphone, you should avoid the
mistake of thinking all "senior friendly"
phones are alike. Look for big buttons, a
clear digital readout with oversized
numbers, simple features, and hearing aid
compatibility. The chances are good that
these features will service you much better
than a lot of bells and whistles you will
never use.
Shop around for the best prices on your
phone.
AGE's analysis found that one of the three
companies we examined is charging up to $79 for
a phone with basically the same features
that another of the three companies makes
available for only $14.95! Just because you
see a phone advertised heavily in magazines
or late night television advertisements does
not mean that's the best price you can find.
Beware of hidden fees and short-term
incentives. Just
because you have gotten rid of the "early
termination fee" on your contract-based cell
phone does not mean that you are free of all
fees. Two of the three companies we
examined charge a $35 "activation
fee," even though another of the three does
not. One of the three companies AGE
reviewed offers AARP members three months of
more minutes at a cheaper price, but that
does not really go to the issue of the
long-term cost of owning the phone.
Figure out your phone use profile and then
shop accordingly. If
you make a lot of calls on your cell phones,
the differences between the three wireless
companies we examined are less clear. If you
are a new wireless user or just want a
wireless phone for occasional or
emergency-only use, then the good news is
that you can keep your phone active for as
little as $7 a
month. Compare that to a contract-based
cell phone that may charge you $60-$80 a
month – whether or not you use the phone for
5 minutes or 500 minutes!
AGE emphasized that seniors should do their
own homework and buy the cell phone that is
right for them. For more information about
the companies reviewed here, go to: Senior
Value Cellphone (http://www.seniorvaluecellphone.com);
GreatCall/Jitterbug (http://www.greatcall.com/);
and Consumer Cellular (http://www.consumercellular.com/).
ABOUT AGE
The Alliance for Generational Equity (http://www.ageadvocacy.org)
is committed to protecting each generation
from abusive public policies and other
practices that erode their quality of life
and rob them of their hard-earned wages.
AGE is dedicated to formulating and
advocating public policies and other
practices that protect the economic security
and quality of life of each generation. AGE
seeks to find solutions outside of political
parties and ideological partisanship.
The Senior Advocate Health & Safety Project
is an undertaking of AGE to provide older
Americans with reliable information they can
use to save money, be healthier and live
safer lives.
SOURCE Alliance for Generational Equality
(AGE), Washington
D.C.