Verizon's new contract terms make it more expensive to defect early
Verizon Wireless has updated its terms of service, which could increase the amount you're paying in early termination fees, or ETF, depending on when you wish to defect and leave the carrier. According to the new terms, if you sign a new two-year contract with Verizon and decide to leave towards the beginning of the contract term, you'll be out more money as your early termination fees do not see any reductions until eight months into your contract.
Under the old contract agreement, your ETF charges of $350 would be reduced by $10 for each month you've fulfilled your obligation to Verizon. However, the change, effective for customers signing on or after November 14th, would hold the $350 fee without any reductions for seven months straight. Starting on the eighth month, Verizon would take $10 off your $350.
Here's how the new ETF breakdown works depending on when you decide to leave:
- Months 8 through 18: $10 reduction for each month
- Months 19 through 23: $20 reduction for each month
- Final month: $60
Here's the language from Verizon:
It looks like Verizon wants to hang on to those contracts, especially if they are subsidizing those smartphones for you.
Source: Verizon Wireless
Get the Windows Central Newsletter
All the latest news, reviews, and guides for Windows and Xbox diehards.
Chuong's passion for gadgets began with the humble PDA. Since then, he has covered a range of consumer and enterprise devices, raning from smartphones to tablets, laptops to desktops and everything in between for publications like Pocketnow, Digital Trends, Wareable, Paste Magazine, and TechRadar in the past before joining the awesome team at Windows Central. Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, when not working, he likes exploring the diverse and eclectic food scene, taking short jaunts to wine country, soaking in the sun along California's coast, consuming news, and finding new hiking trails.