the Top Budget Carrier for Overall Value

the Top Budget Carrier for Overall Value

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Mint Mobile is one of the frontrunners in the budget phone plan market, and it’s clear why. They have a robust marketing strategy, a movie-star-slash-business-mogul co-owner, and clear and concise plans that readily simplify managing your phone plan. The plans cost as low as $15/month, with unlimited calling and texting for all plans and access to high-speed data through T-Mobile’s network across the US (not to mention free call and text to Canada and Mexico). 

In brief, Mint Mobile offers prepaid plans that allow users to manage their data easily. Mint features three-, six-, and 12-month plans, each with a low monthly rate. You can adjust your plan anytime, so if you’d like to test-drive the service before committing to the full year, it’s a low financial stake. 

You can save more if you can sign up for a whole year. But at the very least, you can take advantage of a discounted rate for the first three months with Mint Mobile’s new customer offer, which sets each of its three-month plans, including the unlimited (40GB) plan, at just $15/month.

I reviewed Mint Mobile through an average week in New York City, testing the fundamentals: call quality, data speed and prices, and general coverage. I also noted the setup process, plan offerings, and some other basics that one would look for when switching carriers.

The Mint Mobile logo.

Mint Mobile (Any 3-Month Plan)

All of Mint Mobile’s three-month plans are now discounted for new customers. Choose from 5GB to “unlimited” monthly data (40GB) from our favorite MVNO for the same low prepaid cost of $15/month, and gain access to T-Mobile’s network for unlimited calls and texts.

Plan offerings and flexibility

Mint Mobile’s plan offerings have always been geared toward those seeking savings on their phone plan. Its introductory three-month plans are currently discounted with an exceptional new customer promotion, where all four data tiers cost $15/month. After the promotional period, the plans reset to their standard rates, as detailed below. 

Mint Mobile introductory 3-month plans

Mint Mobile 3-month plans

Mint Mobile 6-month plans

Mint Mobile 12-month plans

*Mint’s Unlimited plans offer a 10GB maximum on hot spot data pulled from your monthly data allotment of 40GB. In contrast, all other plans pull from your monthly data allotment without a specific cap. 

All of Mint’s prepaid plans include unlimited talk and text, free calling to Mexico and Canada from the United States, and WiFi calling and texting. You can also use your 5G and LTE data access for a high-speed hot spot if you wish. It’s worth noting that once your monthly high-speed data cap is reached, you’ll have slower data speeds; however, you’ll still have access to unlimited data at those lower speeds, so you won’t be entirely cast adrift if you meet your data max. 

Before signing up, you’ll want to confirm that your phone is compatible with Mint Mobile. Nearly all 5G or 4G LTE-supported phones that use SIM cards or eSIMs will be compatible. To be sure, you can use the compatibility checker provided on their site by entering your phone’s brand and model (or, even better, your phone’s IMEI number, which you can find by dialing *#06# or in your phone’s settings). 

From there, your setup will be fairly straightforward, either through a straightforward eSIM activation or through the “cleverness kit” that comes with the shipment of a new SIM card. The kit includes instructions on how to keep your existing phone number and a QR code to download the Mint Mobile app easily. It refers to additional tips on their YouTube channel, which has a series of designated videos for setup assistance. 

Mint Mobile review: Mint mobile app and SIM card on phone

Mint Mobile’s set up includes a “cleverness kit,” which contains your SIM card and initial instructions.

Eve Montie/Business Insider

After inputting your SIM card or activating an eSIM, the Mint Mobile app will guide you through the basics of setup. It provides a quick overview of how to use the app and a few checkpoints that confirm whether you want to keep your preexisting phone number. The setup takes less than five minutes, and the app assistance is useful and informative.

If you’re unsure whether you’ll like the service, you can try Mint Mobile risk-free with their 7-day free trial. With 250 minutes, 250 texts, and 250MB of data included, the trial will allow you to see how it compares to your existing plan, and you can switch back to your previous plan at any time during the trial if it’s not for you.

Coverage area

As with other MVNOs like Tello Mobile, Mint Mobile runs on T-Mobile’s network, so their coverage maps are the same.

Mint offers a coverage map tool on its site that you can use to check if your address is covered by its network; if it is, you’ll be able to do anything from talk and text to downloading and streaming HD video over high-speed data, subject to deprioritization during local congestion on T-Mobile’s network.  

Map of United States indicating Mint Mobile’s data coverage areas.

While Mint’s coverage is impressive, you should enter your address on their website to confirm that you’ll be covered.

Mint Mobile

From my testing experience, Mint’s coverage far outperformed my carrier, AT&T, in terms of coverage, and I was thus able to do a lot more with my data than I usually can. This discrepancy wasn’t necessarily a surprise since I live in New York City, and it’s generally known that T-Mobile works better in urban areas than AT&T, but the difference was significant.

Where AT&T had me covered inconsistently and unreliably across most of my testing locations, Mint proved to be more dependable in its coverage in each, including at Business Insider’s office in Manhattan, on a walk through Brooklyn’s Prospect Park, and at visits to some of my favorite coffee shops. I could easily text or make a phone call from each location with no issues.

I’ll mention again that the coverage map will be useful for any prospective Mint Mobile customer, however, because coverage will vary depending on location and should be paramount in your decision to switch carriers.

If you know that T-Mobile works in your area, you may want to check our Mint Mobile vs. Tello Mobile guide to compare the exact offerings between the two budget carriers backed by T-Mobile. 

If you know Verizon more effectively covers your location, you’re likely better off with the Verizon-owned MVNO Visible Wireless. For a comprehensive breakdown of the services, see our guide to Mint Mobile vs. Visible.

Service reliability and speeds

To test Mint’s service reliability, I viewed and downloaded posts from some of the most-used apps on many people’s phones: YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. I had a promising start, as videos loaded perfectly on YouTube with no buffering, but I began to encounter issues when I moved to Instagram and later to TikTok. 

On Instagram, I experienced minor loading issues, but they went away quickly, and I was able to browse as usual, with all but the first few posts loading readily as if I were connected to a WiFi network. 

However, I had more issues with TikTok, where each video took a few seconds to load. While it was only a matter of a second or two of buffering time, those seconds make a difference when discussing an app with a primary focus on instantaneous content generation. Though the app worked perfectly when connected to WiFi and the loading time over data was minimal, if you’re one to scroll through TikTok while on the go, you may grow tired of this barrier to immediacy.

Mint Mobile review: TikTok app shown on a phone

The data-heavy TikTok proved to be a problematic app for Mint’s cellular service.

Eve Montie/Business Insider

In testing phone and video calls, I had mixed results. Phone calls had zero issues; I had reliable service and good call quality, and overall the service worked. Video calls were a different story, and this was the only point in my testing where I noted a result that, as a user, would have truly bothered me. The call, made over Google Meet while I was connected via a full 5G connection, was grainy, and the audio lagged consistently. I again tested this against a WiFi connection, still using Google Meet, and the graininess and lagging had fully resolved. 

I’ve attributed the poor call quality to deprioritization, an unfortunate byproduct of Mint’s use of T-Mobile’s network, as T-Mobile customers have faster data speeds than Mint customers in congested areas.

Customer support

With Ryan Reynolds at the helm, Mint Mobile’s advertising, user interface, and customer support are really where the company shines. Straightforward language, readily available FAQs and other support, and a user-friendly app all serve to create a cohesive and uncomplicated experience as a Mint customer. 

From the jump, Mint’s advertising has appealed to its audience directly and simply, and they carry this attitude throughout the customer journey if you have questions as you go along. The app includes a data usage indicator on the home dashboard to keep track of your usage each month, and you can easily make payments or adjust your plan through the app. 

From a user standpoint, managing your plan and making necessary changes is refreshingly simple. The online chat and phone support are also responsive, with almost no wait time (a first for a mobile carrier support line in my own experience), and agents who are well-versed in their subject matter and friendly.

mint mobile review: app interface and customer support

Mint Mobile’s app offers a helpful customer support tab and the ability to seamlessly adjust your plan.

Eve Montie/Business Insider

Should you sign up for Mint Mobile?

Overall, I really liked using Mint Mobile. The service was consistently good; I could send and receive texts and phone calls with no issues, and the loading issues I experienced were mostly minimal. The poor-quality video calls were a blemish on an otherwise excellent carrier experience. 

Mint is a cost-effective service with simple-to-digest materials, readily accessible customer support, and easily adjustable plan management. These user-experience factors, along with its overall value and flexibility, place it ahead of its competition among the best cheap cell phone plans. 

The amount you’ll save on a plan through Mint is significant compared to what you can expect to spend with most large carriers. With access to T-Mobile’s extensive coverage network, it’s a great value overall; the only catch is that you’ll need to pay for your data in advance and may experience slower speeds behind T-Mobile’s higher-paying customers with some frequency, depending on your location. 

The Mint Mobile logo.

FAQs

Who owns Mint Mobile?

Mint Mobile announced in March last year that it was set to be acquired by network heavyweight T-Mobile. T-Mobile announced the finalized acquisition in May of this year, and it has thus far effectively changed nothing for the average Mint customer from a user standpoint, as the carriers already shared T-Mobile’s network.

Does Mint Mobile work abroad?

With Mint Mobile, you can make international calls to more than 160 countries on a pay-per-minute basis (besides calls and texts to Mexico and Canada, which are free and included with your Mint plan). Depending on the destination, international calls cost 1 to 60 cents per minute. 

If you want to use your Mint Mobile plan while abroad, you’ll need to use international roaming credits, which you can add to your Mint Mobile balance on their website or in the Mint Mobile app. In increments of $5, $10, or $20, you can add international roaming credits to your balance, allowing you to text, call, and use data overseas in more than 180 countries. 

How does Mint Mobile’s family plan work?

Mint’s “Modern Family” plan doesn’t operate the same way other carriers tend to market their family plans; where some carriers might have a discount for adding lines to the family plan, Mint’s plan charges the same amount per line as the first one.

The “family” aspect is really about managing the plan cleanly in one place rather than the price differential. You can start a plan with as little as two lines, and each line will cost differently depending on the data you’ve allotted it, so you could have a family plan with one unlimited data line, one 15GB line, and one 5GB line if you so choose.

Though it doesn’t provide a discount, Mint’s family plan does offer the option to make payments in three-month increments for those who opt for a 12-month plan, alleviating the burden of making a full annual payment up front.

How does Mint Mobile’s unlimited plan work?

Mint Mobile’s unlimited plan is one of the cheapest unlimited data plans, starting at $30/month (or just $15/month with the current new customer promotion). Technically, “unlimited data” means 40GB of high-speed data (subject to deprioritization). After 40GB, you’ll still have access to data, but at significantly slower speeds.

Unlike the best cell phone plans from major carriers, unlimited plans from Mint Mobile and most MVNOs are nominally “unlimited” in that they offer a set amount of high-speed data subject to deprioritization. Notable exceptions are Visible Wireless’ Visible+ plan, which offers 50GB of prioritized high-speed data for $35/month with a current discount, and US Mobile’s Verizon-backed “unlimited” plans, which start at $25/month for 35GB of prioritized data. 

Eve Montie

Insider Reviews Tech Fellow

Eve was a former Tech Fellow with the Reviews team, focusing on consumer technology. She comes with background at a connected fitness tech startup, where she worked directly with consumers translating complex technological information into accessible, user-friendly material. She has also worked in public radio at WBUR Boston, where she produced segments on broadband internet access and smart-home technology. Prior to working at Insider, Eve has also worked in documentary film production for episodes of PBS’ American Experience, museum operations in Prague, Czech Republic, and at a Persian/French bakery in Cambridge, MA.
She double-majored in Art History and Peace and Justice Studies at Wellesley College, concentrating on visual media as it relates to representation and social activism. She was an editor for the Wellesley Review and is an Anchor Point Fellow.
Reach out to her on Twitter @eve_montie.

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