Cell Phone Bills Higher Than Land Line Bills, For the First Time Ever
If you have a cell phone (and we're pretty sure you do), have you thought about giving up your land line (a.k.a. a traditional phone that plugs into the wall)? Maybe you've already ditched your old talker. If you haven't, consider how much you spend on your cell phone plan versus your land line. If you're like us, you've either totally given up on a wired line to your home, or the bills from your cell provider make those wired bills look somewhat paltry. As it turns out, we're not alone -- according to recent government data, U.S. household spending on cell phone plans will exceed spending on land lines for the first time in 2007.
Last year households spent on average $542 on their land lines, while dropping $524 on cell phone plans. Given the increase in extra services (live TV, video messaging, music purchases) available on the shiny new iPhones and BlackBerrys we write about nearly every day, it's no surprise that this year cell phone spending will top land line spending by a wide margin.
That $524 meant people on average spent about $44 per month on their cell plans, which is right about on average with the bare-bones $39.99 plans most providers offer. But remember: This is the average across all U.S. households. If you consider the number of households that still don't use cell phones (we're looking at you, North Dakota), that average goes higher, meaning most folks are opting for additional services like extra minutes, extra lines, wireless data plans, and of course text messaging.
So, to those who got their first mobile phones this year: Welcome to the mobile world, and don't trust every text message you get.
Oh - and don't go around using your phone as a modem if you decide to download video, or you may end up like the man with the $4,190.76 iPhone bill, or, even worse, the poor Canadian guy who got an $85,000 cell phone bill, which we're guessing surpassed his land line bill by a long shot..
From the Associated Press/AOL News
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