T-Mobile Switching to 3-Year Contracts Again

T-Mobile Uncarrier Unleashed

Time sure does fly when you’re raising prices. It has been a little over 2 years since T-Mobile launched its “Phone Freedom” program that was aimed at getting you to switch over from the absurd 3-year contracts that Verizon and AT&T had locked so many customers into. But hey, that was 2 years ago, which is a lifetime in wireless, so we shouldn’t be surprised at all to see that T-Mobile appears to be ready to re-join the 3-year contract squad.

T-Mobile’s Black Friday weekend has started this morning and they are offering up free iPhones if you trade-in certain devices. Those deals on phones, thankfully, are still a part of their 2-year or 24-month device payment contracts. However, additional deals listed by T-Mobile for iPads and Apple Watches are only available at an extended term of 36 months.

If you head to T-Mobile’s Tablets or Smartwatches pages, you’ll see plenty of devices now listed as being available with 36-month contracts. Almost every single iPad they offer is at 3 years now, while the newest Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE 5G is there as well. And for smartwatches, outside of a kid’s watch, everything is now 3 years – Apple Watch Series 11, Pixel Watch 4, Galaxy Watch 8, etc.

T-Mobile 3-year contracts

On these device pages, your options are now to pay in full or go monthly, but you don’t have a choice over 24-months or 36-months. The option is for 3 years or you pay in full – that’s it.

We know these 36-month terms are new because archive.org tells us so. These were all listed as 24-month contracts last month.

This isn’t the first time that T-Mobile has done 3-year contracts, by the way. They were the first to go this route back in 2018, only to quietly step away from them as the other two carriers made the switch. They then used that opportunity as a marketing tactic to get folks to move over to their network, pointing out that AT&T and Verizon were the ones “quietly” making moves by increasing contracts to 3 years. They also mentioned that many of their customers “don’t even know it.”

At the moment, T-Mobile is only moving to 3-year contracts with smartwatches and tablets. Will they do the same for phones? Should they, I hope they make sure their customers “know it.”

Comments

9 responses to “T-Mobile Switching to 3-Year Contracts Again”

  1. Sporttster

    Wondering why more people don't simply go to US Mobile or any of the other MVNOs. I switched from Verz to USM and love it.

  2. pball_inuyasha

    It's not the best priced service but I'm happy paying for the basic Fi plan and getting a cheap pixel about ever 3 years. Haven't had a yearly or longer contract in 10 years, though a few of the phones had monthly credits over a time period.

  3. Carlos Reyes

    I could care less of 3 year contracts as long they bring back the free lines promos for all.

  4. zapote21

    I'm not so concerned about the 3 years to pay it off ….I am more concerned about the promotions that give you Bill credits because then you cannot pay it off early or you lose the credits

    1. Averix

      Or worse, the fine print will charge any credits you did get back to you if you drop off early. All 3 big cell companies are well versed scam artists.

  5. Roman reigns can’t wrestle

    This is why ,for the last few years ,I've just bought cheap unlocked Motorola phones for $300 or so,yeah the cameras aren't great and the software support is crap but hey I've got a headphone jack and a memory card slot and I'm not locked into a multi year contract ,I miss old T-Mobile with John Legere

    1. Averix

      At least he actually tried to make the company different. He succeeded in growing their base and getting users to trust T-Mobile. Funny how quickly greedy management killed that off.

      1. "Our business is growing thanks to NOT acting like our competitors! What should we do now?"
        "Act like our competitors?"
        "Brilliant!"

    2. thesecondsight

      I was a huge fan of Motorola a few years ago. Unfortunately my Moto G7 Power's battery became swollen and my Moto G8 Power's screen failed. Both of these defects occurred within the first year and a half of owning both phones. I've owned a OnePlus Nord N30, which has an SD card slot and a headphone jack, for two years now with no complaints. The only Motorola feature I still miss is FM radio.