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Should you give up your landline phone?
By Lucy Lazarony • Bankrate.com
Can't live without your cell phone? Well
then, maybe you can live without your landline phone. In fact, it may be time
to make your cell phone the only phone in your life.
Why pay $20 bucks or more a month in taxes and fees on a
landline that you hardly use? Why pay long-distance charges and taxes on your
landline when you can call long distance on your cell phone at no extra
charge?
And if your under-used landline is loaded up with enhanced
services such as call waiting, caller ID, voicemail, call forwarding and
three-way calling, you'll save even more.
Ready to cut the cord?
While
it's clear that snipping your landline could save you some serious cash, it's
not for everyone.
Before you cut the cord, make sure going wireless fits your
lifestyle. It frequently works great for college students and mobile, young
professionals.
"They tend to be more nomadic. They change addresses pretty
frequently. They live in group situations," says Linda Barrabee, a senior analyst at the Yankee Group. "For
them the headache of sharing a landline doesn't make sense."
And that's why 12 percent of adults aged 18 to 24 have abandoned
landlines altogether. And another 28 percent plan to do so in the next five
years, according to the Yankee Group.
Frequent business travelers may want to abandon their landlines,
as well. They're not home much and they already take their cell phones
everywhere they go.
"If you travel a lot and you want to be reached wherever
you are, that's another reason to use your cellular phone as your primary
phone," says Sam Simon, chairman of the Telecommunications Research and Action Center.
Cell-phone-savvy empty nesters may want to make the leap to
wireless, as well. The kids are gone. They work long hours and their
landlines are gathering dust, anyway. Why keep paying for it?
Younger and growing families may have a tougher time abandoning
their landlines. If your family talks two hours or more each day on the
phone, you'll probably want to hang on to your landline. A landline makes a
lot of sense if multiple members of your family are making a whole bunch of
local calls.
"With a cell phone, you'd have to get a new phone for each
person and a new number for each person," says Alan Keiter,
president of MyRatePlan.com. "With a landline you're essentially paying
a fixed cost for unlimited usage."
A landline makes it possible for more than one person to get on
the phone at the same time -- another plus for big families.
And if you, all by yourself, talk for two hours or more every
day you may want to hang on to your landline.
"Heavy, heavy users will want to keep the landline,"
Simon says. "If you're on the phone a couple hours a day, it just makes
sense."
Think cutting the cord may be right for you? Before you abandon
your landline completely, consider the downsides of going wireless with all
your phone calls.
Cell phones aren't nearly as reliable as landlines. When was the
last time you picked up your landline and were unable to make a call?
"There's no question it's not as reliable," Keiter says. "A lot of things can affect cell phones,
from weather to where you are in a building."
Reception troubles, static and dropped calls are common problems
with wireless phones. These little headaches are possible at any time.
Here are six other things to consider before you snip your
landline:
- Can
you rely on your cell phone Is the reception sketchy
or crystal-clear? "The most important thing is, does your cell
phone work in every room in your house," Simon says. "If you
need to reach 911, you should be able to do it in every room." In
addition, your cell phone may not work if the power goes out, while a
simple landline phone will.
- How much do you use your
landline?
Do you talk on the phone a few minutes a week or a couple of hours each
day? The less you use your landline, the easier it will be to give it
up.
- How good is your cell phone
plan? Could
you transfer all your personal calls to your wireless phone without
going over your airtime for the month? Not sure? Double-check your
calling plan.
- Keep in mind if you do go
over your airtime, it won't be cheap. You could end up paying 40 cents to 45 cents
a minute for your calls. For tips on finding a cell phone plan that
meets all your calling needs, check out this article
from Bankrate.com.
- How many people use your
landline? Would
cutting your landline mean buying cell phones for each member of your
family? Can you afford that? The bigger your family, the more likely you
are to hang on to your landline.
- Do you use a landline to
connect to the Internet? If you have a second landline strictly for your
Internet connection, you may want to snip it. You could use your cell
phone for local and long distance calls and keep a cheap, barebones
landline for your Internet connection. Hanging on to your solo landline
solely for the Internet connection? Be sure to weigh the costs of other
Internet options, such as cable modems. With a cable modem you’ll get
high-speed Internet via cable TV lines. And you don’t need to subscribe
to cable TV to be eligible for cable Internet service.
Single folks sharing a landline with a roommate or two may want
to consider cutting the cord. You'll have more privacy taking calls on your
cell phone. And you'll avoid arguments over who should pay for a hefty
landline bill.
Be sure to weigh all the costs of going wireless and think long
and hard about your calling needs before snipping
your landline.
Looking for ways to lower your phone bills without severing the
landline in your home? Consider these tips:
Pare down your landline. Many local phone companies charge extra for
enhanced services such as call waiting, caller ID, voicemail, call forwarding
and three-way calling. Cancel all services you don't use.
"Get a very basic wireline that
has no frills on it," Simon says.
Lower your long distance costs. If you've been with
the same company and the same calling plan for years and years, you're
probably paying too much for the long-distance service on your landline. Just
a few minutes of shopping can save you money.
Web sites such as MyRatePlan.com, Telebright.com and SaveOnPhones.com have search engines that make it easy to
compare long-distance offers between companies. Be sure to shop carefully.
For questions about a particular long-distance plan, contact the carrier
directly.
If your long-distance phone calls are few and far between, you
may want to drop your long-distance carrier altogether. You can pay for the
few calls you make with a prepaid phone card, a dial-around service or even
your cell phone if you've got the minutes. And you'll avoid the monthly fees
and taxes charged by long-distance carriers.
For tips and strategies on saving money on long distance, check
out this Bankrate.com article.
Go wireless in your weekend or vacation home. Before you pass on a
landline, check to make sure your cell phone works in your
home-away-from-home. Next, take a close look at your calling plan. Will you
be paying heavy roaming charges for calls made from your weekend home?
Occasional but pricey cell phone calls may still be cheaper than
the cost of installing and maintaining a bare-bones landline. Crunch the
numbers.
You may find that getting away from it all means snipping the
landline on your vacation home.
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