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| Senior Member Prepaid Specialist Posts: 899 Join Date: 17 Mar 2004 Location: Richmond, VA USA
Country: | Here is my attempt to provide some general guidance for Americans going to Europe or overseas. 1. Start your planning and research early! 2. Europe uses GSM 900 and 1800 bands and 240 volts and a different electric plug. Make sure your phone is unlocked and will accept another SIM card (ie. if you have T-Mobile US service, try a SIM card from another provider like Cingular) and the appropriate charging equipment. Best is a phone with both bands; 900 is generally to be preferred over 1800 due to performance. If you have a Verizon, Sprint, Alltel or other non-GSM phone, you might ask in your family or among friends, neighbors or work/study colleages if they have a spare GSM phone you could borrow. 3. You can use your US-based GSM carrier SIM in Europe, but you will probably be paying big bucks to do so. Check it out! Call your customer care and verify what they say on the company website. Don't take the word of a CSR for the truth. 4. Calls to and from landline phones are almost always less expensive than cell phone calls. Consider using US or local country calling cards. ATT & MCI, among others, have toll free numbers in most European contries. Their rates may be a bit high, but those cards are usaully available at many chain stores. If you want to try the internet, there are several decent services such as www.onesuite.com or www.enjoyprepaid.com that offer either toll-free or local or both rates from many countries. There are also internet sites that sell other calling cards like Bizon and Cloncom, among others. 5. If you are travelling in only one or two countries only, you might consider one European SIM card from the primary country you are visiting. INBOUND calls within the country are almost always FREE to the receiver. Outside of that country you will be ROAMING and both inbound and outbound calls will usually cost constiderably more than from within the primary country. Vodafone has a travel promise with relatively favorable INBOUND rates in roaming countries where the local Vodafone affiliate has a similar agreement. 6. It is probably preferable to know your European # in advance and purchase the new SIM while you are still at home. Use www.prepaidgsm.net to see what retail prices are in country or direct from the source. You can pick up bargains on Ebay or your family or friends might be able to help. Watch out for dealers as they often charge rather high prices; likewise watch out on Ebay. 7. If you are travelling in three or more countries, your best bet is probably an international card like United Mobile, 09, Geodessa, TravelSIM and the like. Some of these cards offer free inbound in multiple countries. Rates are often quite competitive with single-country SIMs. 8. There are many considerations to choosing the best or right SIM/service for you. Factors include: will you be using SMS? will you be using GPRS/data? will you be mainly making OUTBOUND calls or receiving INBOUND? what will your call volumes and other usage be? how much will you be roaming? what service do your European friends/family have? There is no one perfect solution for everyone. 9. You might also consider using a callback service to cut your costs (www.enlinea.com or www.callbackworld.com) in conjunction with your international or European SIM card. 10. Disadvantages: calling to European cell phones is usually more expensive than calling to landlines. Your friends and family might not be so happy when they receive their phone bill from calling you on your United Mobile card and they find that the 100 minutes they talked to you cost them $100! Even apart from the costs, some people may not be willing to call you on your new, exotic, temporary number. sending a foreign SMS usually costs more than a national message most often the costs to use your European or international SIM at home (US) are cost prohibitive Service: US T-MO post paid (2) - US T-MO prepaid (2) - UM+ - TravelSIM DE SIMYO - DE SUNSIM T-Mobile DE Calling Cards: Onesuite Enjoyprepaid AT&T MCI Mobivox |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Guru Posts: 1,129 Join Date: 27 Feb 2004 Location: Mississippi, USA
Country: | If you plan to use a callback service in conjunction with a local prepaid SIM or if most of your calls will be incoming, then you should select the local carrier based on who has the best coverage, particularly if all the carriers' SIM packages run about the same price. Since the premium paid for calling a foreign cell phone from the US is almost always uniform for an entire country, you will gain nothing by picking a carrier with better calling plans but less coverage. On the other hand, if you plan to make many outgoing calls from your prepaid SIM, you should carefully consider the different carriers' calling options and even different options offered by individual carriers to decide which best fits your needs. When should I roam rather than buying a prepaid SIM? "It is not a given that it is always cheaper to use a prepaid account, but it does not take many calls at $1.24+/min to make it cheaper. The formula, which I have developed (and humbly dubbed "Newcomb's Cypher" is:Break_even_minutes = Bare_SIM_price/(Roaming_rate - Prepaid_rate) Subtract the cost of a typical prepaid call from the cost of the same call while roaming. Divide the result into the cost of the prepaid SIM, discounting it by the value of any included minutes. For some combinations of roaming and prepaid you will find that it only takes a few minutes of use to pay for the prepaid." |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Specialist Posts: 899 Join Date: 17 Mar 2004 Location: Richmond, VA USA
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Prices in Euros Start pack cost 20 with 10 Euro credit so raw cost is 10 Euros Roaming rate say German SIM roaming in FR 1.59 Euros from documentation I have for an OUTGOING call from a D1 SIM. Rate on FR SIM to FR .55 Euros Therefore: Break even minutes = 10 (bare SIM) / (1.59 - .55) = 10 / 1.04 = 9 minutes I take it the same can be done for INCOMING minutes = 10 / (.79 - 0) (D1 inbound rate / minute is .79 Euros) = ~ 13 So, in this case, if you think you will make or receive any more than 9 - 13 minutes of roaming calls while in FR with your German SIM, you would according to Newcomb's Cypher probably be better off buying the FR SIM. BTW, the D1 highest roaming rate in in Zone 5, Egypt, Bulgaria, Thailand, Malta, Hong Kong, and a few others at 3.49. With that kind of outbound rate, the break even will be around 3 minutes in the above example. Service: US T-MO post paid (2) - US T-MO prepaid (2) - UM+ - TravelSIM DE SIMYO - DE SUNSIM T-Mobile DE Calling Cards: Onesuite Enjoyprepaid AT&T MCI Mobivox | |
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| Moderator Prepaid Guru Posts: 1,215 Join Date: 06 Feb 2005 Location: Swidnik-home, Lublin-work
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And more remarks. 4. "Toll free" access numbers may not be really free or fully available. E.g. 00800 (international toll free numbers) which seem to be very popular as access numbers in Poland for non-Polish calling cards (or other services of that kind) are not free. You must pay a flat "per call" rate from landlines and payphones or national off-net rate from Orange prepaids. Those numbers are not available from other GSM prepaids. 5. As to Europe, inbound calls with local SIMs are free in all the countries except Russia which is changing only now its "billing rules" to "Calling Party Pays" When using local SIM, inbound SMSes and MMSes are free in Europe and usually free elsewhere. Inbound SMSes are usually free also in roaming. 7. For any European country you can find an international card with free incoming calls but no international card has free incoming calls in all European countries. International cards may have no coverage in some European countries (mainly eastern Europe: Estonia, Belarus, Moldova but also Jersey, IoM or Faeroe) There are problems with SMS interchange with 09 and Hop SIMs. Some international cards don't support data transmission. | |
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| Senior Member Prepaid Pioneer Posts: 576 Join Date: 01 May 2006 Location: Greece
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