Everything You Need to Know About Today’s New Cell-Phone Plans

The industry has upended the model of how you buy a phone and pick a plan.

Man playing game with a smart phone
(Image credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

If your cell-phone carrier hasn’t already nudged you into a no-contract service plan, expect a not-so-subtle push the next time you go to the store. The two-year contract has been moving toward extinction since 2013, when T-Mobile dropped the option from its offerings. Other carriers began to stray from the two-year commitment, too, touting no-contract plans as a more flexible alternative. Then, last summer Verizon Wireless eliminated the two-year contract as an option for new customers. “That was the nail in the coffin,” says Logan Abbott, president of phone-plan comparison site Wirefly.com. Now, AT&T has stopped providing two-year contracts to new customers, too. Sprint is the lone carrier among the Big Four that offers two-year contracts to new and current customers—although it briefly discontinued the contract option for new customers in early 2016.

See Also: Best Phone Plans for Every Type of User

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Lisa Gerstner
Editor, Kiplinger Personal Finance magazine

Lisa has been the editor of Kiplinger Personal Finance since June 2023. Previously, she spent more than a decade reporting and writing for the magazine on a variety of topics, including credit, banking and retirement. She has shared her expertise as a guest on the Today Show, CNN, Fox, NPR, Cheddar and many other media outlets around the nation. Lisa graduated from Ball State University and received the school’s “Graduate of the Last Decade” award in 2014. A military spouse, she has moved around the U.S. and currently lives in the Philadelphia area with her husband and two sons.