T-Mobile Automates Plan Upgrades, Increases Costs for Longtime Subscribers Starting This Week
T-Mobile customers on older phone plans will be automatically migrated to newer plans beginning this week, often resulting in higher monthly fees of up to $6 per line. The changes target plans dating back 10 to 15 years, including Simple Choice, T-Mobile One, One Plus, Magenta family plans, and pre-merger Sprint plans from 2020, as reported by The Mobile Report.
A T-Mobile spokesperson declined to specify which plans are retiring, but the migration affects a broad range of legacy options. The shift is scheduled to begin this week, with implementation dates tied to individual billing cycles—new plans will appear on subscribers’ next bills. Notifications have been delivered via text message and the T-Mobile app (T-Life), and account holders can check details using T-Mobile’s dedicated migration tool, which requires login credentials.
Screenshots illustrate the migration of a CNET colleague’s One Plan TE to T-Mobile’s Experience More with Appreciation Savings plan.
Customers are transitioned to “like-for-like” plans, which include comparable features but may alter specific benefits. For example, a CNET employee’s One Plan TE will become the Experience More with Appreciation Savings plan, granting unlimited high-speed 5G/4G LTE data, 60GB of mobile hotspot data, ad-supported Netflix, and 4K video streaming. However, Apple TV Plus, previously free via the Apple TV on Us promotion, now costs $3 monthly. Opting for the standard Experience More plan would incur higher fees, but most customers won’t face increased costs beyond the Apple TV add-on.
The T-Mobile Kickback program, which rewards low-data users with credits, is retiring alongside the legacy plans. Free promotional lines will remain unaffected. Industry parallels include AT&T’s recent legacy plan fee hikes and T-Mobile’s prior March 2025 price increases, but this automated reclassification represents a more direct approach.
Allan Samson, T-Mobile’s Chief Marketing Officer, emphasized no customer action is required: “It just is going to happen.” Retiring plans will shift customers to Essentials, Essentials Saver, Experience More, Experience Beyond, or Better Value tiers, offering expanded international roaming, enhanced 5G speeds, and greater hotspot data. Samson noted that most affected users will pay less than the current retail price of their new plan, avoiding the “rack rate” for new customers.
Unhappy subscribers have no recourse beyond switching plans or providers. Internally, the overhaul aims to reduce complexity: retiring over 1,100 legacy billing codes streamlines operations, allowing T-Mobile to allocate more resources to customer experience, per COO Jon Freier’s internal memo.
Samson contextualized the shift as necessary modernization: “Network capacity and capabilities evolve—fifteen years ago, a phone might have handled basic tasks like weather checks, whereas today, streaming 4K is standard.” He affirmed the company’s readiness to manage customer inquiries during the transition.
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