Skip to content
Budget Seniors
Budget Seniors

  • Home
  • Contact Us
Budget Seniors

How Much Does Internet Cost Per Month?

Budget Seniors, June 1, 2026June 1, 2026
πŸ“ΆπŸŒ
United States Β· All Connection Types Β· Cable Β· Fiber Β· 5G Β· Satellite Β· Hidden Fees Exposed

The average American pays $81.16 per month for home internet β€” but what you actually owe depends on where you live, who your provider is, what speed you need, and how many hidden fees your bill quietly includes. This guide covers every type of internet service, every major provider, and the specific tricks that will genuinely lower your bill.

πŸ“°
Trending Now β€” Internet Cost News

Two years after the federal Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) ended in June 2024, an estimated 5 million households have cut internet service entirely, per a Brattle Group report. Bills that had been $0–$30/month jumped to full price overnight with no federal replacement. Meanwhile, T-Mobile and Xfinity are locked in an aggressive price war β€” Xfinity launched new mobile and internet bundle pricing in April 2026, claiming customers can cut their bills by up to 50% versus AT&T and Verizon. Competition in urban markets is finally delivering real savings for those who know to negotiate.

🌐 The Honest One-Paragraph Summary

Home internet in the U.S. runs anywhere from $10 per month (low-income assistance programs) to well over $150 per month for premium fiber plans. The most common range for a mid-tier household plan is $55–$100 per month before equipment fees and taxes. After those are added, the real average climbs to $81 per month. Your actual number depends heavily on three things your provider will never advertise: your location (rural areas have less competition and pay more), whether you’re still on a promotional rate that’s about to expire, and whether you’re renting equipment you could own outright. Every dollar of that is covered below.

πŸ’° Internet Plans & Monthly Cost β€” Speed vs. Price Guide

These ranges reflect what Americans actually pay in 2026 across major providers. Promotional rates for new customers are typically 20–40% lower for the first 12–24 months. Always ask what the price becomes after the promotional period ends before signing.

Speed Tier Monthly Cost Range Connection Type Best For
25–100 Mbps (Basic) $30–$55/moEntry-level broadband DSL, Cable, Fixed Wireless 1–2 people, email, browsing, occasional streaming
200–500 Mbps (Mid-Tier) Most Popular $50–$80/moFCC’s defined broadband minimum is 100/20 Mbps Cable, Fiber, 5G Home Households of 2–4, streaming on multiple TVs, video calls, remote work
1 Gbps (Gigabit) $70–$120/moFiber most reliable at this tier Fiber, some Cable Power users, large households, working from home full-time, gaming
2–5 Gbps (Multi-Gig) $120–$200+/moOverkill for most homes Fiber only Content creators, home servers, smart home networks with many devices
5G Home Internet $35–$60/moT-Mobile from $40; Verizon from $35 Fixed 5G Wireless No-contract alternative to cable; speeds vary by location; check coverage first
Satellite (Starlink) $80–$120/moHardware $349 one-time; rental option available Low-Earth Orbit Satellite Rural homes with no cable or fiber; speeds 50–300 Mbps; 25–50ms latency
Low-Income Programs $10–$30/moLifeline subsidy: up to $9.25/mo off Cable / DSL (provider-specific) Qualifying households β€” Xfinity Essentials $9.95/mo, Spectrum Assist $17.99/mo
⚠️ Your Advertised Price Is Not What You Pay

A survey of 954 U.S. adults found the average internet bill runs about $19 more per month than the advertised price after equipment rental fees ($10–$15/mo), taxes, and vague “regulatory recovery” charges are added. The only way to know your real number is to ask your provider for a complete breakdown of every line item on the bill before you sign. Never judge a plan by the headline price alone.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts β€” Internet Costs, Answered Without the Runaround

These are the questions people actually search β€” and the answers most provider websites bury or avoid.

  • 1
    Is $100 a month for internet a lot? Is $120 a good price? $100/mo is above average β€” the national average is $81 Β· $120/mo is high unless you’re getting gigabit fiber or satellite in a rural area Β· Most households can get quality service for $55–$80/mo with some effort
    The national average for home internet in 2026 is $81.16 per month, based on a survey of over 2,100 providers across the country. Paying $100 or more per month puts you above that average, and in most cases, it’s a sign of one or more of the following: you’re on a plan whose promotional rate has expired and the price quietly increased, you’re renting equipment from your ISP instead of owning it, you have unnecessary add-ons like enhanced Wi-Fi packages or tech support bundles, or you simply haven’t negotiated or compared options recently. The sweet spot for most American households β€” two to four people, multiple streaming devices, occasional video calls β€” is $55–$80 per month for a solid 300–500 Mbps cable or fiber plan. If you’re paying significantly more than that and you live in an area with competition, there’s almost certainly a better deal available with a quick phone call to your current provider or a check of what else is available at your address.
  • 2
    How much is internet per month for one person in an apartment? $30–$60/mo is the realistic range for a single person Β· A 100–300 Mbps plan is plenty for one person Β· 5G home internet from T-Mobile starting at $40/mo is worth checking Β· Some apartment buildings include internet in rent
    A single person’s internet needs are quite modest by modern standards. For email, video calls, streaming two or three services, remote work on a laptop, and general browsing, 100 Mbps is more than adequate β€” you genuinely do not need gigabit speeds for one person’s typical usage. At that tier, plans from cable providers run $30–$55 per month. If cable or fiber isn’t available or feels overpriced at your address, T-Mobile’s 5G Home Internet starts at $40 per month with no equipment purchase and no annual contract β€” a genuinely competitive alternative worth checking at tmobile.com/home-internet with your address. One often-overlooked option: many apartment buildings negotiate bulk internet deals with a provider, and internet service is sometimes included in your rent or available to residents at a discounted building rate. Ask your property manager directly before signing up for your own plan.
  • 3
    What are the hidden fees on my internet bill β€” and how do I get rid of them? Equipment rental: $10–$15/mo (buy your own modem/router and eliminate it) Β· Taxes & regulatory fees: $5–$15/mo (unavoidable) Β· Paper billing fee: $1–$3/mo (switch to autopay/paperless) Β· Tech support packages: $5–$15/mo (opt out) Β· Price after promo ends: often +$15–$30/mo (call to negotiate)
    The equipment rental fee is the biggest and most avoidable hidden cost on most internet bills. ISPs charge $10–$15 per month to rent a modem-router combination they bought in bulk β€” often more than the device is worth after 12 months of rental. Buying your own compatible modem and router typically costs $80–$150 upfront and pays for itself in under a year. Your provider is legally required to accept your own equipment (per federal rules from 2019) and cannot charge you rental fees for a device you own. Check your provider’s website for a list of compatible modems before buying. Beyond equipment, check your bill for tech support packages (often auto-enrolled), enhanced Wi-Fi subscriptions, and optional security add-ons β€” these can add $10–$30/month for services most people never use. Switch to paperless billing and autopay to eliminate those small per-item fees. Finally, if you’re past your promotional period, call your provider’s loyalty or retention department and ask directly: “Is there a current promotional rate you can apply to my account?” This works more often than most people expect.
  • 4
    Is fiber internet worth the extra cost compared to cable? In most cases, yes β€” fiber at $70–$100/mo often offers more stability, faster upload speeds, and more transparent pricing than cable at $55–$80/mo Β· The upload speed difference matters most for video calls, cloud backup, and working from home
    Cable internet and fiber internet often cost within $10–$20 per month of each other at comparable speed tiers, but they behave differently in ways that matter to daily life. Cable internet shares bandwidth with your neighbors β€” during peak evening hours, speeds on cable plans can slow noticeably when many households are streaming simultaneously. Fiber connections are dedicated, meaning your speeds stay consistent at 9 p.m. on a Friday the same as at 7 a.m. on a Tuesday. The second big difference is upload speed. Cable plans often advertise fast downloads (300 Mbps) but slow uploads (10–30 Mbps). Fiber plans are typically symmetrical: 500 Mbps down and 500 Mbps up. If you’re on video calls, uploading large files, using cloud storage, or working from home, that upload speed is what you feel day to day. Fiber providers like AT&T Fiber, Verizon Fios, and Google Fiber also tend to have more stable pricing without the dramatic post-promotional jumps that cable providers are known for. If fiber is available at your address, it’s worth the modest premium for most households.
  • 5
    Why is internet so expensive in rural areas β€” and what are the real options? Rural areas often have only one or two providers β€” less competition = higher prices Β· Average rural internet cost exceeds urban by 20–40% Β· Real options: Starlink satellite ($80–$120/mo), T-Mobile 5G home internet where available ($40/mo), fixed wireless ($50–$80/mo) Β· Federal BEAD program ($42 billion) is funding new rural broadband β€” coverage improving
    The single largest factor driving high internet prices in rural America is the absence of competition. In areas where only one provider offers broadband, that provider has no incentive to keep prices low or improve service. Research consistently shows that areas with at least two competing ISPs pay about 17% less than areas with just one. If you’re in a rural area, your practical options depend on your specific location. Starlink satellite internet from SpaceX β€” $80 to $120 per month plus a $349 hardware cost (or rental option in some areas) β€” delivers 50–300 Mbps with low latency (25–50ms) and no cable lines required. It works anywhere with an unobstructed sky view. T-Mobile 5G Home Internet at $40/month is worth checking even if you’re rural β€” coverage is broader than most people expect. Fixed wireless providers (small regional ISPs that beam internet to an antenna on your roof from a tower) often serve rural addresses at $50–$80 per month with reasonable speeds. The federal government’s $42.45 billion BEAD program is actively funding fiber expansion into rural communities, so new competition may arrive within the next few years β€” check your state’s broadband office for local deployment timelines.
  • 6
    How much internet speed do I actually need β€” and am I paying for more than I use? 1–2 people, basic streaming and browsing: 100 Mbps is plenty Β· Family of 3–4 with multiple streaming devices: 200–300 Mbps adequate Β· Remote workers with video calls: 200–500 Mbps recommended Β· Gamers or heavy users: 500 Mbps+ Β· Most households overpay for speed they never reach
    Speed tiers are one of the most effective ways ISPs extract extra money from customers who assume bigger numbers mean better experience. For realistic context: Netflix 4K streaming requires 25 Mbps per stream. A Zoom video call uses about 3–4 Mbps. Downloading a 50GB game takes under 7 minutes on 1 Gbps but under 12 minutes on 500 Mbps β€” a difference most households will never notice. A household of two people streaming in 4K on separate TVs while one person has a video call is using roughly 55 Mbps of actual bandwidth. A 200 Mbps plan covers that with enormous headroom. If you’re paying for a 500 Mbps or 1 Gbps plan but have two or three people doing normal activities, you’re almost certainly overpaying. The exception: if your household has 10+ connected smart home devices all active simultaneously, or if someone works from home doing large file transfers, the higher tiers become genuinely useful. Run a speed test at fast.com to see what you’re actually getting β€” many households discover they’re not even receiving the speed they’re already paying for.
  • 7
    How do I get low-cost or free internet if I can’t afford the regular price? Lifeline program: up to $9.25/mo off via FCC (fcc.gov/lifeline) Β· Xfinity Internet Essentials: $9.95/mo Β· Spectrum Internet Assist: $17.99/mo Β· AT&T Access: $30/mo Β· Comcast/Xfinity: check if ACP funds are ever renewed Β· Income eligibility required for all programs
    The federal Affordable Connectivity Program that helped 23 million households ended in June 2024 when Congress didn’t renew its funding. As of now, no direct federal replacement has passed, though Congress continues to debate reinstatement. The options that remain: the FCC’s Lifeline program provides up to $9.25 per month off internet or phone service for qualifying low-income households β€” apply at lifelinesupport.org. Several major ISPs maintain their own low-income programs independent of federal funding. Xfinity Internet Essentials provides 25/3 Mbps service for $9.95 per month to households with at least one K–12 student who qualifies for the National School Lunch Program. Spectrum Internet Assist provides 30 Mbps for $17.99 per month to qualifying households. AT&T Access provides 10–25 Mbps service for approximately $30 per month to households receiving SNAP, SSI, or other qualifying benefits. Income and eligibility requirements vary β€” contact each provider directly and ask what low-income programs they currently offer at your address. Some qualify for multiple stacked discounts.
  • 8
    How do I actually lower my current internet bill β€” step by step? Call your provider and ask for a lower rate Β· Buy your own modem/router ($80–$150 one-time vs. $180/year rental) Β· Drop unnecessary add-ons Β· Check competitor pricing at your address before calling Β· Switch plans or providers if the loyalty discount doesn’t come through
    Calling your current provider and asking for a better rate works far more often than most people expect β€” especially if you mention a competitor’s price. ISPs typically have retention offers that never appear on the website, because they only unlock when a customer threatens to leave or actively asks. Before calling, spend five minutes checking what competitors offer at your specific address using the FCC’s broadband map at broadbandmap.fcc.gov or a provider comparison site. When you call, say: “I’ve been a customer for X years and I saw that [competitor] is offering [their price]. Can you match that or offer a current promotion?” Most ISPs will offer something. If they don’t, moving to the competitor is genuinely worth the hassle given that switching at $20–$30 per month less adds up to $240–$360 per year in savings. Second action: stop renting equipment. Look up your modem model (it’s on the device itself or in your account portal), find a compatible replacement on Amazon or Best Buy, and return the rented equipment. The upfront cost of $80–$150 pays back within 8–12 months. That single change saves $120–$180 per year indefinitely.
πŸ“Š Major Provider Starting Prices β€” At a Glance
πŸ“‘ Xfinity (Comcast)
From $40/mo
Cable Β· Speeds 75 Mbps–3 Gbps Β· Available in 39 states Β· Price lock promos for new customers Β· Equipment fee extra Β· Data cap 1.2 TB (most plans)
🌐 AT&T Fiber
From $55/mo
Fiber Β· 300 Mbps–5 Gbps symmetrical Β· 21 states Β· No annual contract Β· No data caps Β· More stable pricing β€” no post-promo surge typical of cable
πŸ“Ά T-Mobile 5G Home
From $40/mo
Fixed 5G wireless Β· 100–300 Mbps typical Β· No equipment purchase required Β· No annual contract Β· Speeds vary by location β€” check your address first at t-mobile.com
πŸ“Ί Spectrum
From $30/mo
Cable Β· No data caps Β· No annual contract Β· 300 Mbps–1 Gbps Β· 44 states Β· No modem fee but charges for router; price increase after promo period is common
πŸ” Your Situation β€” What to Do Next
I just moved into a new apartment β€” how do I pick an internet plan?
NEW HOME Β· SETUP
Don’t call the first provider you find on a flyer in your mailbox β€” take 15 minutes to compare what’s actually available at your specific address, because your options vary dramatically by location. Start at the FCC’s broadband map (broadbandmap.fcc.gov) or type your address into a comparison tool to see all providers available to you. In competitive urban markets, you may have three or four real choices; in some rural areas, you may have one. For an apartment, 200–300 Mbps is more than enough for the vast majority of people β€” don’t let a salesperson upsell you to 1 Gbps based on it “sounding faster.” Ask each provider: what’s the price after the promotional period? What is the equipment rental fee? Is there an installation charge? Is there a contract or early termination fee? Introductory promotional rates are real and valid β€” they’re often 30–40% below standard pricing β€” but they typically expire after 12–24 months. Put a calendar reminder for one month before your promo period ends to call and negotiate a renewal or shop competitors.
πŸ—ΊοΈ Find providers: broadbandmap.fcc.gov πŸ“Š Compare at your address: allconnect.com or highspeedinternet.com ⏰ Set reminder: call to renegotiate 1 month before promo ends ❓ Always ask: “What is the price after the promotional period?”
I’m on a fixed income β€” what low-cost options are actually still available?
LOW INCOME Β· FIXED INCOME Β· SENIORS
The federal ACP that helped so many people is gone, but real alternatives still exist β€” you just have to ask for them specifically by name because providers rarely advertise them prominently. The FCC’s Lifeline program provides up to $9.25 per month off your internet or phone bill. Apply at lifelinesupport.org β€” eligibility is based on income (at or below 135% of the federal poverty level) or participation in SNAP, Medicaid, Federal Public Housing Assistance, SSI, or Veterans Pension. Separately from Lifeline, many ISPs run their own discounted programs: Xfinity Internet Essentials ($9.95/month) is open to households with school-age children who qualify for the National School Lunch Program, senior housing residents, and people with disabilities in public housing. Spectrum Internet Assist ($17.99/month) requires participation in SSI, SNAP, or other qualifying programs. AT&T Access (approximately $30/month) is available to SNAP recipients. Call each provider that serves your address and specifically ask: “Do you have a low-income or income-based internet program?” β€” the answer sometimes differs from what appears on their website.
πŸ›οΈ Lifeline: lifelinesupport.org Β· (800) 234-9473 πŸ’» Xfinity Essentials: internetessentials.com Β· $9.95/mo πŸ“‘ Spectrum Assist: spectrum.com Β· $17.99/mo πŸ“ž AT&T Access: att.com/internet/access Β· ~$30/mo
I live in a rural area and my internet is terrible and expensive β€” what are my real options?
RURAL Β· SATELLITE Β· 5G
Rural internet has genuinely improved in the last two years, and Starlink is no longer the only option worth considering. Start by checking T-Mobile 5G Home Internet at your exact address β€” it reaches more rural locations than most people expect, and at $40 per month with no equipment purchase and no contract, it’s often the fastest and cheapest change you can make. If 5G doesn’t reach you, Starlink satellite delivers real broadband-class speeds (50–300 Mbps, 25–50ms latency) for $80–$120 per month. The hardware costs $349 to purchase or is available as a rental in some areas with no upfront cost. Starlink offers a 30-day return policy, so you can try it risk-free. If you’re on a slow DSL or old satellite plan (HughesNet or Viasat), either of these options will be a dramatic improvement in both speed and latency. HughesNet and Viasat use geostationary satellites with 600–800ms latency β€” that’s why video calls feel broken and streaming buffers. Starlink’s low-Earth orbit satellites fix that problem. The federal BEAD program is also funding fiber expansion into underserved rural areas; your state’s broadband office can tell you whether your area is scheduled for new infrastructure in the next 1–3 years.
πŸ›°οΈ Starlink: starlink.com Β· $80–$120/mo Β· 30-day trial πŸ“Ά T-Mobile 5G: t-mobile.com/home-internet Β· $40/mo Β· check address πŸ›οΈ BEAD rural funding: broadbandusa.ntia.gov πŸ—ΊοΈ FCC coverage map: broadbandmap.fcc.gov
Should I bundle internet with TV and phone β€” or does it cost more in the long run?
BUNDLES Β· CABLE TV Β· VALUE
Bundles often appear cheaper upfront but cost significantly more long-term once the promotional period ends β€” and they lock you into paying for TV you may not need. The math works like this: a bundle of internet + cable TV might be advertised at $120/month, versus $60/month for internet alone. That looks like a $60/month “savings” on TV β€” but cable TV alone would cost $70–$90 per month if you bought it separately, meaning the bundle is only saving you $10–$30/month while adding significant complexity and a longer promotional commitment. After 12–24 months, bundle prices typically jump by $30–$50 per month. The better question to ask before bundling is: do I actually watch live TV or cable channels enough to justify them? For most households, especially those under 55, the answer is no β€” streaming services (Netflix, Hulu, YouTube TV) at $15–$75 per month total replace everything cable offered at a lower combined price with no contract. If you do watch local sports, local news, or specific cable channels you can’t get streaming, a bundle may make sense β€” but get the post-promotional price in writing before you sign.
πŸ“Ί Compare bundle value vs. internet-only: allconnect.com 🎬 Streaming alternatives: Netflix, Hulu, YouTube TV, Disney+ πŸ“‹ Always ask: “What is the price after the promotional period?” ⚠️ Bundles often jump $30–$50/mo after promo ends
My current bill is too high β€” the specific steps to reduce it starting today
LOWER YOUR BILL Β· ACTION STEPS
These are the five concrete moves that actually work, in order of ease and impact. First: buy your own modem and router. Check your current modem’s model number (on the device label or in your online account), find a compatible replacement on Amazon for $80–$150, return the ISP’s equipment, and stop paying $10–$15 per month indefinitely. Second: call your provider and say: “I want to discuss my current rate β€” I’ve been looking at options from [competitor] and would like to know what you can offer.” Ask specifically for a loyalty discount or current promotional rate. Third: audit your bill line by line for optional services β€” enhanced Wi-Fi packages, tech support plans, paper billing fees β€” and call to remove each one you don’t actively use. Fourth: if you’ve been on the same plan for more than two years and haven’t renegotiated, step down to a lower speed tier temporarily. Your household may not notice the difference between 500 Mbps and 300 Mbps, but you’ll notice the $15–$20/month in savings. Fifth: if your provider won’t budge at all, switch. One phone call to port your account to a competitor β€” many of whom offer competitive introductory rates plus gift card bonuses for switching β€” is worth the effort when the annual savings run $200–$400.
πŸ”Œ Buy your modem: save $120–$180/year immediately πŸ“ž Call retention department: ask for loyalty rate πŸ—ΊοΈ Check competitors: broadbandmap.fcc.gov Β· allconnect.com ⚑ Speed test: fast.com β€” confirm you’re getting what you pay for
πŸ“ Find Internet Providers & Help Near You

Use the buttons below to locate internet service providers, electronics stores selling modems and routers, tech setup help, or community centers with free Wi-Fi assistance in your area.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Key Internet Links & Resources
πŸ—ΊοΈ Find providers at your address: broadbandmap.fcc.gov πŸ“Š Compare plans: allconnect.com Β· highspeedinternet.com πŸ›°οΈ Rural satellite option: starlink.com πŸ“Ά 5G home internet: t-mobile.com/home-internet πŸ›οΈ Lifeline low-income discount: lifelinesupport.org Β· (800) 234-9473 πŸ’» Xfinity Internet Essentials: internetessentials.com ⚑ Speed test: fast.com or speedtest.net 🌐 Rural broadband funding: broadbandusa.ntia.gov πŸ“‹ FCC consumer complaints: fcc.gov/consumers/guides/filing-informal-complaint πŸ”Œ Compatible modem lookup: your ISP’s website under “approved equipment”
βœ… 5-Step Checklist β€” Getting the Best Internet Deal
  • Step 1: Look up every provider available at your specific address using the FCC broadband map at broadbandmap.fcc.gov. Knowing your options is the foundation of every negotiation. Many people overpay because they assume they have fewer choices than they actually do.
  • Step 2: Calculate how much speed you actually need. For 1–2 people doing standard activity, 100–200 Mbps is sufficient. For a family of 3–4 with multiple streaming devices, 300–500 Mbps covers everything. Don’t pay for gigabit speeds unless someone in your household has a specific reason for them.
  • Step 3: Buy your own modem and router. Stop paying $10–$15/month to rent equipment that pays for itself in under a year. Verify compatibility with your ISP before purchasing β€” check their approved equipment list or call and ask.
  • Step 4: Call your current provider with a competitor’s price in hand and ask directly for a loyalty or promotional rate. If they won’t match or come close, switch. The annual savings typically far exceed the effort of making a phone call or scheduling a new installation.
  • Step 5: If you’re on a fixed income or qualify based on income or program participation, call every provider at your address and ask specifically about low-income programs. Ask about Lifeline, and ask whether the provider has any additional income-based discounts beyond Lifeline. You may be eligible for multiple stacked discounts that reduce your bill dramatically.

Internet pricing, plan availability, and promotional offers are set by individual service providers and change without notice. All prices, speed tiers, and comparisons in this guide reflect publicly available information at the time of writing and may not represent current offers in your area. Actual pricing varies by location, provider, plan tier, equipment choices, and promotional eligibility. Always verify pricing directly with your provider or at broadbandmap.fcc.gov before making any decisions. This page has no affiliation with any internet service provider, government agency, or technology company mentioned. Provider names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Recommended Reads

  1. 10 Best Fiber Optic Business Internet
  2. 10 Best Low-Cost Internet Service Providers
  3. Comcast / Xfinity Internet Essentials β€” Low‑Income Internet
  4. 20 Balance Transfer Credit Cards: No or Low Fee Options
πŸ“‘ Telecom & Streaming

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Budget Seniors

Categories

  • βš•οΈ Health & Wellness
  • ✈️ Travel & Transportation
  • πŸ’Έ Benefits & Finance
  • πŸ“Near Me
  • πŸ“‘ Telecom & Streaming
  • πŸ›’ Retail & Memberships
  • πŸ›‘οΈ Insurance
  • πŸ›°οΈ Starlink

Recent Posts

  • Average Car Insurance Cost Per Month
  • How Much Does Internet Cost Per Month?
  • How Much Does Health Insurance Cost Per Month?
  • 10 Best Accident Lawyers in Costa Mesa & Orange County
  • How Much Does Spotify Cost Per Month? Complete Price Guide

Latest Comments

  1. Budget Seniors on How Do I Get Ozempic for $25 a Month?May 28, 2026

    πŸ’Š Here's the real story on your $199 Ozempic bill β€” and you have more options than you think. That…

  2. Sharon Hohler on How Do I Get Ozempic for $25 a Month?May 27, 2026

    I'm on Medicare and they still want 199.00 for my ozempic, this is to much ,how can I get a…

  3. Linda Miller on Starlink Cost Per Month β€” Every Plan, What It Includes, and Whether It’s Worth ItMay 18, 2026

    Your info and layout are equally wonderful. Extremely comprehensive yet understandable. You explain and show all very well. Not only…

  4. Budget Seniors on Costco Membership Fee for Seniors β€” Pricing, Hidden Savings & Health BenefitsMay 17, 2026

    Your frustration is completely valid β€” and you're far from alone. Millions of American seniors and veterans feel the same…

  5. Merna Keller on Costco Membership Fee for Seniors β€” Pricing, Hidden Savings & Health BenefitsMay 17, 2026

    It's sad that companies don't even consider senior citizens and the military who fought for America. Can't even get a…

BudgetSeniors.com is a privately owned website and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by the Social Security Administration, Medicare, or any other government agency. The content on this site, including calculators and chat support, is for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional financial, legal, or medical advice. For official eligibility determinations, please contact the relevant government agency directly.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
©2026 Budget Seniors