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Wouldn't you save more money by doing yerly contracts?

I'm about to sign up for sprint but I need to sort something out. If I wanted to upgrade yearly wouldn't I be better off going with a 1 year contract rather then making sure I spend $89 for the "Gold" status? ? I mean you lose 75 bucks when buying a new phone if you only have a one year contract but if I only have the $69 everything data and $10 smartphone charge it would be $79 compared to $99 for the more minutes plan. I know this depends on usage also but ill only need 450. Am I getting this right? I figure the one year route saves me$20/mnth which = $240/yr - the $75 hit I take for being silver. Correct? Thanks for the help. I look forward to joining the sprint family.
 
There is no 1 year contract option that I know of.
Heck even if you have your own phone Sprint still makes you do a 2 year.
 
I'm pretty sure Sprint used to have a 1-year contract, but the discount they would give you was even less than that $75. (Also, I seem to think that to get the "good" advertised price on new phones required not just the $150 discount but additional rebates as well, and they would only give you those rebates for the full 2-year renewal.)

So in short, even if it is still an option I'm pretty sure it wouldn't work out in your favor.
 
There is zero reason to do a contract at all. Any way you look at it, if you are doing a contract you will pay more.

If you need the plan that gets you the upgrades, then there is really no problem. If you dont need the plans that get you up to the status don't get a contract at all.

Just look at the numbers. If you dont need more then 1500 mins, you save 480 bucks a year, on the cheaper plan. 480 bucks is usually more then the discount for 2 phone, with new contract.

If you dont need more then 450 minutes, I dont use that many minutes, if you don't do the contract, you still have 240 dollars which is the same for a upgrade.

Bottom line, get what you need and if it does not line with with a new phone every year, it is because the difference in price of the contract is the same for a phone.

The second reason you should never do a contract is sprint needs to be taught a lesson. Contract customers are the best customer. If you are bound to them, they can rest assured you will have a high chance of staying with them. Once you move to off contract, sprint actually takes a hit with investors, because you can leave for the slightest reason.

Dont worry about upgrades. Get the phone you want with the plan that matches. Take the differences in the price between what you would have paid and what you are paying, place it in a saving accounts. When there is a phone you want badly enough to go for, go. Sprint does not care to keep you as a customer, you should not worry about them.
 
Bottom line, get what you need and if it does not line with with a new phone every year, it is because the difference in price of the contract is the same for a phone.

The second reason you should never do a contract is sprint needs to be taught a lesson. Contract customers are the best customer. If you are bound to them, they can rest assured you will have a high chance of staying with them. Once you move to off contract, sprint actually takes a hit with investors, because you can leave for the slightest reason.

Dont worry about upgrades. Get the phone you want with the plan that matches. Take the differences in the price between what you would have paid and what you are paying, place it in a saving accounts. When there is a phone you want badly enough to go for, go. Sprint does not care to keep you as a customer, you should not worry about them.

I agree.

@supremekizzle where did you read about one year contracts with Sprint?
 
I guess I just figured they had 1 year options. ROI, are you speaking of prepaid when you say don't do a contract? I can't find the pre paid plans on sprints site. If they offer prepaid through one of the prepaid companies they own (ie. Boost); would I be able to activate sprint phones on them? Specifically the EVO and EVO 3d? Thanks for clearing these issues up.
 
I guess I just figured they had 1 year options. ROI, are you speaking of prepaid when you say don't do a contract? I can't find the pre paid plans on sprints site. If they offer prepaid through one of the prepaid companies they own (ie. Boost); would I be able to activate sprint phones on them? Specifically the EVO and EVO 3d? Thanks for clearing these issues up.
you can just walk in, buy the phone, setup the service as you normally would. The contract is only for discounts.
 
you can just walk in, buy the phone, setup the service as you normally would. The contract is only for discounts.

Makes perfect sense to me that you should be able to do this now. You see, I have been brain washed by the cell carriers that my only options are contracts or prepaid. Nice. This is what ill do. Buy the phone outright and stick on the 450 everything data. Thanks a lot.
 
Perhaps I'm missing something here, but I don't see how you'd save any money off contract if you do stay with Sprint for the 2 year period.

As far as I know, there is no price difference between a plan on contract or off contract with Sprint.

For example, isn't the Everything Data 450 $69.99 regardless? So if I purchase an EVO straight up (without signing a contract) at $450, I'm still paying $69.99 + $10 Premium Handset Fee per month. If I sign a contract, I pay $200 for the phone, but the same amount for the plan. If anything, the ETF is only $200 (and then prorated), so I could sign the contract, immediately break the contract, and still be ahead by $50.

As far as I know, the only major carrier that's offered lower prices for off-contract plans was T-Mobile, though I'm not sure they even still have this policy.

If I'm mistaken, please let me know. I'd love to be off contract and saving money... but what you're saying doesn't make sense to me....

There is zero reason to do a contract at all. Any way you look at it, if you are doing a contract you will pay more.

If you need the plan that gets you the upgrades, then there is really no problem. If you dont need the plans that get you up to the status don't get a contract at all.

Just look at the numbers. If you dont need more then 1500 mins, you save 480 bucks a year, on the cheaper plan. 480 bucks is usually more then the discount for 2 phone, with new contract.

If you dont need more then 450 minutes, I dont use that many minutes, if you don't do the contract, you still have 240 dollars which is the same for a upgrade.

Bottom line, get what you need and if it does not line with with a new phone every year, it is because the difference in price of the contract is the same for a phone.

The second reason you should never do a contract is sprint needs to be taught a lesson. Contract customers are the best customer. If you are bound to them, they can rest assured you will have a high chance of staying with them. Once you move to off contract, sprint actually takes a hit with investors, because you can leave for the slightest reason.

Dont worry about upgrades. Get the phone you want with the plan that matches. Take the differences in the price between what you would have paid and what you are paying, place it in a saving accounts. When there is a phone you want badly enough to go for, go. Sprint does not care to keep you as a customer, you should not worry about them.
 
The best way to go is prepay on gsm. CDMA is so locked Down that even if you buy a phone on eBay that should work on ...let's say virgin mobile they won't let you.
 
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