So it’s “Postpaid”? ie you get a monthly statement for the monthly fee plus any extra usage charges for the month ending? If it’s that, then I believe you’re ok.
So it’s “Postpaid”? ie you get a monthly statement for the monthly fee plus any extra usage charges for the month ending? If it’s that, then I believe you’re ok.
I’m in Singapore now with an iPhone 12 Pro Max and:
- my normal Boost prepaid sim installed (didn’t buy a roaming pack prior to departure)
- a Flexiroam eSim with the free 3GB for 28 degrees MasterCard holders activated
The Boost SIM latched on to Starhub when I landed and the Flexiroam SIM is connected to Singtel.
I managed to force my Boost SIM to try to connect to TPG SG (which fails as Telstra doesn’t roam into TPG here). The benefit of this is that my SIM then routes through the Flexiroam data and says it’s putting calls and texts via Mobile Data (in a similar way to Wifi Calling). Means I can keep calling and texting as if I were still at home
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Just ported my number across to Amaysim with esim, was really fast - kicked it off on Good Friday and this morning all done! Super easy to set up the esim, it was my first go with one and very straightforward.
If you're thinking of doing the same I've posted a 'refer a friend' link in the referrals forum where you and I would both get a $10 credit, which makes the new roaming plan better value.
Can anyone confirm if you go overseas with a Telstra service that uses day pass, but don't turn on data roaming, whether you can access inbound calls/SMS without incurring the $10 a day fee?
I'm on a prepaid plan with Telstra - ie they take $40 from my credit card for the following month,
I was able to use texts and receive calls without incurring any extra charges. I turned mobile data off and I could be wrong but I'm sure I received calls and texts when I wasn't on wifi - I travelled widely around UK, NYC and Western Europe for four months
Can anyone confirm if you go overseas with a Telstra service that uses day pass, but don't turn on data roaming, whether you can access inbound calls/SMS without incurring the $10 a day fee?
Unlike an SMS, receiving a call to an Australian mobile number when overseas is not free, unless via Wi-Fi calling, which is currently available when roaming only to those using Telstra's network here (e.g. Boost)
Using your secondary sim for Wi-Fi calling with your primary is only possible if the secondary is not roaming, so likely local to its location
If you have a VoIP provider like Crazytel for your fixed/landline phone number, then you could divert your Australian mobile number to it, and receive (as well as make) calls via their app, which also allows you to set its caller ID as your mobile number
I'm on a prepaid plan with Telstra - ie they take $40 from my credit card for the following month,
I was able to use texts and receive calls without incurring any extra charges. I turned mobile data off and I could be wrong but I'm sure I received calls and texts when I wasn't on wifi - I travelled widely around UK, NYC and Western Europe for four months
A International Day Pass charge is automatically applied when you use your services overseas in eligible destinations. Usage includes making or receiving a call, sending an SMS or using mobile data.
I'm mainly wanting it to receive SMSs if needed, so I'll disable SMS and see what happens from there!
A International Day Pass charge is automatically applied when you use your services overseas in eligible destinations. Usage includes making or receiving a call, sending an SMS or using mobile data.
I'm mainly wanting it to receive SMSs if needed, so I'll disable SMS and see what happens from there!
A International Day Pass charge is automatically applied when you use your services overseas in eligible destinations. Usage includes making or receiving a call, sending an SMS or using mobile data.
I'm mainly wanting it to receive SMSs if needed, so I'll disable SMS and see what happens from there!
Same with many MVNOs
I'm a fan of Woolworths Mobile (Teslstra) and with the 10% off shopping vouchers the plan pays for itself.
But I'm a lowish user, the 100GB/ 12Mths plan is plenty.
Is the common view that for someone who needs their aussie number active and capable of receiving both calls and SMS that the Vodafone $5 day option is the best plan? Traditionally, when travelling, especially in Europe, I would find a local sim and plan and load that onto my phone for the trip. But naturally I would lose the aussie number for the duration. But as I need the aussie number active it looks like vodafone may be best? I am with Optus but they want to $10 a day (apparently not eligible for the $5 option) so perhaps I will change rather than go onto another optus plan.
Is the common view that for someone who needs their aussie number active and capable of receiving both calls and SMS that the Vodafone $5 day option is the best plan? Traditionally, when travelling, especially in Europe, I would find a local sim and plan and load that onto my phone for the trip. But naturally I would lose the aussie number for the duration. But as I need the aussie number active it looks like vodafone may be best? I am with Optus but they want to $10 a day (apparently not eligible for the $5 option) so perhaps I will change rather than go onto another optus plan.
If you need to receive calls (or send texts), you'll need to pay extra for roaming. The Optus plans with this included in your monthly plan were the best option but they are being removed from the market.
$5 per day is good for short trips, infrequent travel, or people who will need to use their Aussie number a lot while overseas. If you're with Telstra and have an eSIM capable phone, there's a slightly more complicated option to pick up a data eSIM for your destination and use wifi calling to make calls on your Aussie number without paying for roaming.
If you're overseas for more than a week, and don't have high usage needs (eg hours of calls), the prepaid roaming packs from Amaysim or Felix might be the best options now. For example, $20 for 365 days instead of $5 for 1 day. Or in your case $20 for every 100 minutes of calls.
I’m in Singapore now with an iPhone 12 Pro Max and:
- my normal Boost prepaid sim installed (didn’t buy a roaming pack prior to departure)
- a Flexiroam eSim with the free 3GB for 28 degrees MasterCard holders activated
The Boost SIM latched on to Starhub when I landed and the Flexiroam SIM is connected to Singtel.
I managed to force my Boost SIM to try to connect to TPG SG (which fails as Telstra doesn’t roam into TPG here). The benefit of this is that my SIM then routes through the Flexiroam data and says it’s putting calls and texts via Mobile Data (in a similar way to Wifi Calling). Means I can keep calling and texting as if I were still at home
When I go to the UK, I have a Telstra postpaid eSIM with roaming turned off, and I simply get a three-mobile UK physical SIM with Europe roaming and use my Telstra account over data. Works a treat and is cheap.
The only problem is I can't phone internationally to countries outside Australia from my Telstra SIM as I'm overseas (dunno why that would be enforced, but that's Telstra for you). (eg. to call NZ, I had to use my UK SIM or Skype credit)
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