4

Telstra and Boost relent to cost increases with a $5 per month price rise

 1 year ago
source link: https://ausdroid.net/mobiles/carriers/2023/04/19/telstra-and-boost-relent-to-cost-increases-with-a-5-per-month-price-rise/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

Telstra and Boost relent to cost increases with a $5 per month price rise

Boost-App-696x392.jpg

After Vodafone led the charge during March and increased plan costs by $5 per month, it seems that the other major players; Optus, Telstra and — through their network ties — Boost Mobile are all following suit in some form.

As Vodafone did, Boost is emailing clients early to get on the front foot with the email received by the customers stating:

From time to time the prices of our services are reviewed, and the decision has been made to increase the prices of our plans from 4 July 2023. We know any price rise is hard and it’s not a decision that has been taken lightly.

Then goes on to explain the cost increase that users will see from July, equating to $5 per month for many plans. For a $30 per month plan, that equates to a 16.6% increase (I might need to speak to my boss about a 16.6% pay increase) which, given the cost of living these days will likely prompt some to shop around. Obviously, for the higher-cost plans, that percentage decreases but will still impact family budgets.

Here’s the full breakdown of changes:

Current RechargeRecharge from 4 July 2023Expiry
$10 for 3GB$12 for 5GB7 days
$20 for 5GB$22 for 7GB28 days
$30 for 20GB$35 for 25GB28 days
$40 for 30GB$45 for 35GB28 days
$50 for 40GB$55 for 45GB28 days
$70 for 65GB$70 for 90GB (no price change)28 days
$200 for 130GB$230 for 160GB12 months
$300 for 240GB$300 for 240GB (no change)12 months

With plans increasing with multiple carriers; Telstra included, already increasing prices, it’s almost inevitable now that all carriers will do the same. Telstra’s site notes:

Telstra will use the CPI rate released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics for the 12 months to the March quarter. Any increase will be rounded to the nearest dollar and will occur from our July billing cycle. We’ll let you know before any changes take effect.

It’s this tie to Telstra and their increase that has almost certainly forced the hand of Boost to increase consumer costs. We reached out to both companies for comment and, despite the late hour, receive an extremely prompt response from a Boost Spokesperson:

Boost Mobile remains deeply committed to delivering ongoing great value for Australians, and it continues to offer this with full coverage of the Telstra 3G, 4G and 5G mobile networks. This includes access for less than $20 per month when buying a $230 recharge with 12-month expiry.

For me, that passion and commitment to providing customers value are just a couple of the reasons I’ll be staying with Boost.

It’s an interesting space we’re in right now with the cost of living pressures pushing many families hard. There will almost certainly be cheaper plans available, but the question is: Will you get the coverage and inclusions you need?

Editors Note: Given the time of contact, we’ll ensure we post an update to this article with any comment we receive back from Telstra.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK