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Best Cell Phone Service in Georgia

Compare and find the best cell phone service in Georgia at MyRatePlan. Want to know which cell phone carriers have the best coverage where you live? Click or tap the icons below to view each carrier's coverage map. Once you know which carrier offers the best coverage in your area, you can compare the price and features of each cell phone plan offered by that carrier with the MyRatePlan comparison tool. Smaller carriers, known as MVNOs, usually operate on the networks of one of the four large carriers.
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Cellphone Service Providers Georgia

Compare and Find Cell Phone Plans in Georgia

When you begin looking for cell phone coverage in Georgia, rest assured that you won't have to look far to find a plan that will fit both your needs and your budget. You'll want to carefully consider what you actually require in a cell phone and how much you really want to spend. You may find a deal that seems inexpensive in the beginning, but after comparing it to other plans with similar features, it may be more of a drain on your wallet than you expected. It's always a smart idea to compare different cell phone plans before settling on one. We offer a variety of services here at MyRatePlan that will help you spot the different features and benefits right off the bat. This helps you choose a plan that is right for you as an individual or as a family in Georgia. You'll know from the beginning who offers the rates that will fit your budget, as well as what company has the best features and most reliable reception.

Cell Phone Coverage in Georgia

What is the Best Cell Phone Coverage in Georgia?

There are few things more frustrating than being on a call that keeps breaking up or dropping, all because your carrier has sub-par coverage quality in your area. Before you make your final decision on a cell phone plan, take a look at the carrier's coverage map to ensure that the carrier has strong, reliable coverage in your city. For coverage in Georgia, you shouldn't have too much to worry about, as national carriers have coverage in every city and more than enough coverage in the major cities. It's always smart to double-check, though, so you don't end up with any coverage surprises later.

Availability of Types Of Cell Phone Plans in Georgia

Cell Phone Plan Options in Georgia

Many cell phone users have multiple purposes for their phones. In addition to regular calls, they want to send texts, browse websites, and use online apps. It's important for them to think about three major limits when comparing cellular plans. Carriers may enforce separate text, data download and minute caps. Keep in mind that the advertised limits usually pertain to domestic communication.

Numerous Georgia residents utilize cell phones for the vast majority of their calls. Some even use them for all internet browsing and email. They usually need high minute and data caps. On the other hand, people with corded phones or computers might favor low-end cellular plans that are designed for occasional use. MyRatePlan makes it easy to compare providers that offer either type of service.

Cellular plans can be classified into three groups. They include family, contract-free and individual plans. The most flexible option is the no contract plan. It's also known as month-to-month, prepaid or pay-as-you-go. Many Georgia stores sell prepaid wireless phones that people can begin to use at any time. The lack of a contract makes it easier to control costs and switch carriers when necessary. However, fees and cell phone prices tend to be higher than average.

Single-line contracts can only be used with one cell phone. Additional phones, tablets and notebook computers cannot communicate on the same plan. There's no need to worry about dividing up minutes or data among multiple devices. Single-line service is normally the least expensive choice for Georgia residents who live alone or have family members who don't use cellular phones.

Another popular option is a shared or family plan. It's more costly than single-line service, but the per-line expense is lower. A single data cap applies to multiple devices and phones. For instance, a married couple's shared plan might come with 30 gigabytes of bandwidth. If the wife uses 12 gigabytes, the husband could still download 18 GB more. Any limits on texting or minutes will also collectively apply to all family members.

Most wireless contracts remain in effect for 12 to 24 months. Payments are usually made on a monthly basis. The contract terms normally require customers to pay large fees if they decide to cancel before the expiration date. Pay-as-you-go plans allow users to decide exactly how much they want to spend and when they want to cancel the service.

Best Wireless Plans for people in Georgia

What's The Best Cell Plan in Georgia?

You can quickly narrow down your plan choices by first deciding how many people you want on your plan, and then figuring out how much you need of each feature (minutes, text messages, and data).

If you're trying to keep your phone bill as low as possible, you can get a very cheap contract plan by limiting your minutes and texts to about 400 or less. This is only smart if you have to stay within a specific budget, as unlimited plans offer better deals, especially if you use your phone frequently throughout the day. If you're going the no-contract route, you put money onto a wireless card and then use that card to buy minutes, which you can purchase in minute packages or by the minute.

As unlimited talk and text plans have become commonplace, data usage has become the biggest factor in how carriers separate their plans. Expect carriers in Georgia to charge a premium for high data plans. Data plans include a set number of megabytes or gigabytes, and legitimate unlimited data plans are rare. It's important to find a plan with enough data, because if you go over your data limit, the carrier may throttle your data or tack on expensive overages.

Compare Cell Carriers in Georgia

Compare Cell Phone Carriers in Georgia

All the major national carriers (AT&T, Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile, and Sprint) cover Georgia. The city also has alternate, smaller carriers, referred to as MVNOs, available. The MVNOs use the larger carriers' networks, so coverage is still strong when you go with a smaller carrier.

AT&T has been one of the nation's largest wireless providers for decades. The carrier has all the plan options listed above, including individual, family, contract, and no contract plans.

Verizon Wireless has the same types of plans, with a slightly different selection process. The first thing you do with Verizon Wireless is choose your prepaid plan (if you're going no-contract) or your shared data plan, with each plan offering a different data limit. An individual or a family can make use of a shared data plan through Verizon Wireless, and each of those plans include unlimited minutes and text messages.

Sprint has the usual individual, family, and prepaid plans, but it separates itself from the pack with its unlimited data option. Unlike other carriers that throttle your data, Sprint has a real unlimited 4G LTE plan called Unlimited Freedom. It also has a unique type of family plan for friends and family, called the Better Choice Plan.

T-Mobile has nothing but no-contract plans, and chose to call itself the 'uncarrier' because of that. Offering both individual and family plans under its T-Mobile ONE and Simple Choice plans, the carrier offers customers unlimited minutes and text messages, with data throttled at different limits depending on the plan you choose.

Use the MyRatePlan cell phone plan comparison tool above to compare different carriers and plans with service in Georgia. We also include other smaller carriers (those aforementioned MVNOs) so you can see what every carrier offers.