Skip to content
Budget Seniors
Budget Seniors

  • Home
  • Contact Us
Budget Seniors

Best Senior Cell Phone Plans β€” What You Actually Pay & Who Has the Real Deals

Budget Seniors, May 23, 2026May 23, 2026
πŸ“±πŸ‘΄
All Major U.S. Carriers Β· 55+ Plans Β· Discounts & Hidden Fees Explained

Senior phone plans range from completely free (government Lifeline) to $70 per month for premium unlimited. This guide covers every real option, which carriers still offer genuine 55+ discounts, which “senior deals” have fine print that cancels the savings, and how to pay as little as $15 a month β€” or nothing at all β€” for reliable coverage.

πŸ“°
What’s Happening Right Now

AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon are facing their highest customer loss rates in years β€” which is actually great news for seniors shopping around. All three carriers are under pressure to compete on price. Meanwhile, T-Mobile just reshuffled its 55+ plan lineup, adding Netflix and Apple TV+ bundles to sweeten the deal, and Consumer Cellular is running a limited AARP promo of two unlimited lines for $55/month with $200 back for customers 50 and older who sign up before June 14.

πŸ”₯
Current Promotion β€” Limited Time

AARP members age 50+ can currently get 2 lines of unlimited talk, text & data for $55/month through Consumer Cellular β€” plus $200 back as bill credits over 8 months. Use promo code SAVE200 at consumercellular.com or at AARP’s benefits page. Offer expires June 14, 2026. New customers only. Taxes not included.

πŸ“‘ The Real State of Senior Phone Plans β€” Plain English

Here’s what the carriers don’t advertise loudly: most “senior plans” are either Florida-only, require two lines, or bury a $10/month penalty if you don’t use AutoPay from a bank account. The honest truth is that some of the best deals for seniors are not labeled “senior” at all β€” they’re low-cost unlimited plans from carriers like Mint Mobile or Consumer Cellular that beat dedicated 55+ pricing on a pure dollar basis. Before you make any decision, two things matter most: what network covers your home address (T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon have different strong and weak zones), and how much data you actually use β€” most seniors over 65 use under 3 GB per month, which means they’re often overpaying for unlimited data they never touch. This guide cuts through all of it.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts β€” What Seniors Need to Know Right Away

Before reading the full guide, here are the most important facts β€” straight answers to the questions people search for most. Each one is explained in more detail below.

  • 1
    What is the cheapest cell phone plan for senior citizens? As low as $0/month through Lifeline Β· $15/month Mint Mobile 55+ plan Β· $20/month Consumer Cellular entry tier
    If you receive Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, or have household income at or below 135% of the federal poverty level, you may qualify for the federal Lifeline program β€” which provides free or deeply reduced phone service at no monthly cost. For seniors who don’t qualify for Lifeline but want the lowest possible bill, Mint Mobile’s 55+ plan starts at $15/month for 5 GB of data and unlimited talk and text on T-Mobile’s network. Consumer Cellular’s entry plan starts at $20/month and is widely considered the most senior-friendly paid option for people who want real customer service and no contract.
  • 2
    Which phone carrier is best for seniors overall? Consumer Cellular β€” best overall Β· T-Mobile 55+ β€” best for unlimited data Β· Verizon β€” best rural coverage Β· Lively β€” best if safety features matter
    Consumer Cellular consistently ranks first for senior users because of its U.S.-based phone support, AARP discount, no contracts, and the flexibility to choose either AT&T or T-Mobile network coverage per line. For seniors who want a big-carrier experience with unlimited data and added perks like Netflix, T-Mobile’s 55+ plan starting at $50/month for one line is the strongest nationwide option. Verizon earns its reputation in rural areas and smaller towns β€” their network reliability outside cities is consistently rated the best of the three majors. Lively (formerly GreatCall/Jitterbug) is a different kind of choice: designed around safety, it includes an urgent response button that connects to a 24/7 monitoring center, which makes it valuable for seniors who live alone β€” though you pay a premium and are locked to Lively’s phones.
  • 3
    How much is T-Mobile’s 55+ plan per month? $50/month for one line Β· $100/month for two lines (T-Mobile Experience More 55+) Β· Taxes and fees add roughly $5–$8/line Β· Proof of age required at sign-up
    T-Mobile currently offers three tiers under its 55+ lineup. The entry level Essentials Choice 55 starts around $40–$50/month for one line, while the Experience More with 55+ Savings plan β€” their most recommended tier for most people β€” runs $70/month for one line but drops to $50/line for two lines ($100 total). That higher tier adds Netflix Standard and Apple TV+ subscriptions, unlimited international texting, 5 GB of high-speed data in over 215 countries, and full in-flight Wi-Fi. All T-Mobile 55+ plans require at least one account holder to be age 55 or older (proof of age at activation) and work with AutoPay for the advertised price. All 50 states qualify β€” unlike AT&T’s senior plan, which is currently limited to Florida residents.
  • 4
    Does Verizon have a senior plan? Yes β€” but only for Florida residents ($80/month for 2 lines) Β· All other states: no dedicated senior plan Β· Best Verizon option for non-Florida seniors: Visible by Verizon at $25/month on Verizon’s network
    Verizon’s dedicated 55+ plan offering two unlimited lines for $80/month is only available to customers with a Florida billing address β€” you must verify residency at sign-up, and AutoPay with a bank account is required for that price, otherwise an extra $10/line is added. If you live outside Florida, Verizon has no age-discounted plan. However, Visible by Verizon β€” a subsidiary that runs on Verizon’s full network including Ultra Wideband 5G β€” offers Visible Plus for as little as $45/month with no contract and no annual commitment. For seniors who specifically want Verizon’s coverage (widely considered the most reliable in rural and suburban America) without the Florida restriction, Visible is one of the best-kept workarounds available.
  • 5
    Can seniors get a free cell phone from the government? Yes β€” through the federal Lifeline program Β· Qualifiers: Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, Veterans Pension, Federal Public Housing, or income at/below 135% of poverty level Β· Apply at lifelinesupport.org
    The Lifeline program β€” administered by the FCC through the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) β€” provides a monthly discount of up to $9.25 on phone or internet service for qualifying households. Many Lifeline-participating carriers use this subsidy to offer a free smartphone with free talk, text, and data at no monthly cost. Qualifying programs include Medicaid, SNAP (food stamps), SSI, Veterans Pension, Federal Public Housing Assistance, and Tribal TANF. If you don’t participate in any of those programs but your household income is at or below 135% of the 2026 Federal Poverty Guidelines, you may still qualify based on income alone. Tribal Lifeline provides an even larger benefit β€” up to $34.25/month off service β€” for eligible households on Tribal lands. The Affordable Connectivity Program ended in May 2024 and is not available in 2026. To apply or check eligibility, visit lifelinesupport.org or ask your phone carrier directly.
  • 6
    How do I keep my phone number when I switch carriers? Number porting is your legal right under FCC rules Β· All major carriers support it Β· Takes 1–3 business days Β· Critical rule: Do NOT cancel your old service before the switch completes
    Keeping your existing phone number when switching carriers is called “number porting,” and it is your legal right under FCC rules β€” no carrier can prevent it. The process works like this: when you sign up with your new carrier, give them your current phone number and your account number and PIN from your old carrier (found on your bill or by calling old carrier support). The new carrier handles the transfer on their end. The most important rule seniors must follow: do not cancel your old service yourself before the switch is complete. Canceling early can permanently lose your number. The transfer takes one to three business days, and your phone will briefly lose service while it switches networks. After porting is complete, your old account closes automatically β€” no action needed on your part.
  • 7
    What is the AARP cell phone discount and how do I get it? Consumer Cellular: 5% off monthly service + 30% off accessories Β· Current limited AARP promo: 2 unlimited lines for $55/month + $200 back Β· AT&T: $10/month off per line on Premium plan for AARP members
    AARP membership (currently $16/year) unlocks phone plan discounts at two major carriers. Consumer Cellular gives AARP members a 5% discount on their monthly service charge plus 30% off select accessories β€” and extends the standard 30-day risk-free trial to 45 days. Through a current limited AARP promotion, new Consumer Cellular customers age 50 and older can get two unlimited lines for $55/month with $200 back delivered as bill credits over the first eight months (promo code SAVE200, expires June 14, 2026). AT&T offers AARP members $10 off per line per month on their Premium unlimited plan. To claim either discount, you need an active AARP membership number, which you can get or verify at aarp.org. The Consumer Cellular AARP deal is available directly through AARP’s benefits page at aarp.org/membership/benefits/tech/consumer-cellular.
  • 8
    Do senior phone plans work with big-button phones and flip phones? Yes β€” most major networks support simple phones Β· Best options: Lively Flip2, TCL Classic, Sonim XP3 Plus Β· Any unlocked GSM phone works on T-Mobile or AT&T networks
    A common worry among seniors who prefer a simple flip phone or large-button phone is whether any carrier will support it. The answer is yes β€” nearly every carrier in this guide works with simple phones. Lively sells the Jitterbug Flip2, a purpose-built senior flip phone with a large screen, big buttons, an urgent response button, and a built-in hearing aid compatibility rating. AT&T currently offers the TCL Classic flip, the XP3plus 5G, and the Sonim XP5plus. T-Mobile and Consumer Cellular carry similar simple phone options. If you already own a simple phone you like, check whether it’s “unlocked” (works on any network) or locked to a specific carrier. Any unlocked GSM phone will work on T-Mobile, AT&T, or Consumer Cellular’s network. You can ask any phone store to check whether your existing phone is unlocked.
πŸ’° Senior Cell Phone Plans β€” Complete Price Comparison Table

The table below covers the major U.S. options specifically relevant to seniors in 2026, from free government plans to premium unlimited. All prices reflect AutoPay where applicable. Taxes and carrier fees (typically $5–$10/month) are not included unless noted.

Plan / Carrier Monthly Cost Data Best For
Lifeline (Gov’t Program) $0/moFree if you qualify (Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, or income-based) 3 GB + unlimited talk/text Low-income seniors on Medicaid, SNAP, or SSI β€” apply at lifelinesupport.org
Mint Mobile 55+ $15/moRequires 3-month prepay β€” runs on T-Mobile’s network 5 GB high-speed data Budget-conscious seniors comfortable with prepaid and online account management
Consumer Cellular (Entry) $20/moAARP members: 5% off monthly bill Β· 30-day risk-free trial 500 MB data Light users who mainly call and text, rarely use data apps
Consumer Cellular Unlimited Top Pick $40/mo~$38/mo with AARP 5% discount Β· AARP promo: 2 lines $55/mo Unlimited data Most seniors β€” best balance of price, real customer service, and no contract
T-Mobile Essentials Choice 55+ $50/mo (1 line)2 lines: $60/mo total β€” unlimited nationwide Β· Age 55+ required Unlimited (deprioritized after 50 GB) Seniors wanting a major-carrier name with proven unlimited coverage across all 50 states
T-Mobile Experience More 55+ $70/mo (1 line)2 lines: $100/mo β€” includes Netflix + Apple TV+ Unlimited + 50 GB premium priority Seniors who stream video, travel, and want Netflix included in the price
Verizon 55+ Plan Florida Only $80/mo (2 lines)Florida billing address required Β· Bank AutoPay required Unlimited Florida seniors who want Verizon’s network at a discounted two-line price
Visible by Verizon (Plus) $45/moNo contract Β· Verizon’s full network including 5G UWB Unlimited + 50 GB premium data Seniors outside Florida who want Verizon coverage without the Florida restriction
AT&T 55+ Plan $40/mo (1 line)2 lines: $70/mo Β· AARP adds $10/line off Premium plan Unlimited Seniors on AT&T’s network β€” verify nationwide availability directly with AT&T at sign-up
Lively (Safety-Focused) $19.99–$49.99/mo+ Lively-specific phone required ($99–$199) Β· Urgent Response add-on available Unlimited talk/text; limited data tiers Seniors living alone who want a built-in urgent response button and simplified phone experience
⚠️ The Fine Print That Changes Everything

Nearly every carrier requires AutoPay enrollment for the advertised price β€” without it, most add $5–$10 per line per month. Always confirm whether the plan requires a bank account (not just a credit card) for AutoPay, since some carriers only give the discount for bank-linked AutoPay. AT&T’s 55+ plan availability varies β€” confirm nationwide eligibility directly before ordering. Prices shown are standard rates and may not include taxes or the FCC’s Regulatory Recovery Fee (~$4.49/line on T-Mobile).

πŸ“Š Which Carrier Is Right for You? β€” At a Glance
πŸ† Best Overall for Seniors
Consumer Cellular
$20–$40/mo Β· No contract Β· U.S.-based phone support Β· Choose AT&T or T-Mobile network Β· AARP 5% discount Β· 30-day risk-free trial
πŸ“Ά Best Unlimited + Perks
T-Mobile 55+
$50–$70/mo Β· All 50 states Β· Netflix + Apple TV+ on top tier Β· Proven 5G coverage Β· Age 55+ required Β· AutoPay required
🌲 Best Rural Coverage
Verizon / Visible
Verizon’s network consistently rated most reliable outside cities. 55+ plan: Florida only. Everyone else: Visible by Verizon at $45/mo, no contract, nationwide.
πŸ’Έ Best Budget Option
Mint Mobile 55+
$15/mo for 5 GB data Β· T-Mobile network Β· Requires 3-month prepay Β· Best if you’re comfortable managing your plan online β€” no walk-in stores
πŸ†˜ Best for Safety Features
Lively (Jitterbug)
Purpose-built senior phones with Urgent Response button. $19.99–$49.99/mo + cost of Lively phone. Worth it if living alone and safety is the priority.
πŸ†“ Free β€” If You Qualify
Lifeline Program
Free smartphone + talk/text/data for qualifying low-income households. Apply at lifelinesupport.org. Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, and income-based eligibility. One per household.
πŸ” Your Real Questions β€” Answered Honestly
I only use my phone to call family and occasionally check email β€” what plan do I actually need?
LIGHT USE Β· LOW DATA
You almost certainly need far less data than any carrier will try to sell you. A typical pattern of calls, occasional texting, and checking email a few times a day uses roughly 200 MB to 500 MB of data per month β€” less than half a gigabyte. Consumer Cellular’s 500 MB plan at $20/month handles this comfortably. If you occasionally browse the news or look something up on Google but do not stream videos or music, a 1–2 GB plan covers you with room to spare. The mistake seniors frequently make is upgrading to unlimited data “just in case,” paying an extra $15–$20/month for data they never use. Check your last few monthly data usage numbers β€” most Android phones and iPhones show this under Settings β€” before choosing a tier. If you’ve never gone above 1 GB, the $20–$25/month plans are genuinely all you need. Consumer Cellular’s plans also let you upgrade midmonth if you’re running low, and downgrade again next month β€” no penalty either way.
πŸ“Š Check your data usage: Settings β†’ Cellular (iPhone) or Settings β†’ Network (Android) πŸ’‘ Under 500 MB/month: Consumer Cellular $20/mo is plenty πŸ”„ Upgrade or downgrade anytime β€” no contract, no fee
I’m on a fixed income β€” what options exist to lower my phone bill right now?
FIXED INCOME Β· SAVE MONEY
There are three genuine paths to a lower phone bill β€” and most seniors on fixed incomes qualify for at least one. First, check Lifeline eligibility immediately: if you receive Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, or Veterans Pension, you almost certainly qualify for free phone service. Visit lifelinesupport.org or ask your current carrier if they participate in Lifeline β€” Assurance Wireless (T-Mobile’s Lifeline carrier), Safelink Wireless, and TruConnect all offer free service under the program. Second, if you don’t qualify for Lifeline but your bill feels too high, switch to a lower data tier β€” most seniors on unlimited plans pay $15–$25/month more than their actual usage requires. Third, if you are an AARP member, make sure you’re using the Consumer Cellular AARP discount (5% off monthly + 30% off accessories). An AARP membership costs $16/year β€” if it saves you $5/month on your phone bill, it pays for itself in less than four months. If you are already on the lowest plan that fits your usage, there is honestly not much else to negotiate β€” unlike cable companies, wireless carriers rarely offer unpublished retention discounts, though it never hurts to call and ask.
πŸ†“ Lifeline check: lifelinesupport.org β€” takes 2 minutes πŸ’³ AARP discount: aarp.org/membership/benefits/tech/consumer-cellular πŸ“‰ Downgrade your data tier β€” most people never notice the difference πŸ“ž Call your carrier and ask: “What is the lowest plan I can be on without losing my number?”
I live in a rural area β€” which carrier will actually have signal at my house?
RURAL Β· COVERAGE
Rural coverage varies dramatically by county and even by street address β€” and no single carrier is best everywhere. The three major networks β€” Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile β€” all publish free online coverage maps, but these can be overly optimistic. The most reliable way to know who has the best coverage at your home is to ask a neighbor who has reliable service which carrier they use. Verizon consistently rates highest for rural and suburban reliability in most regions, particularly in the Southeast, Midwest, and mountain West. T-Mobile has improved significantly in rural areas since acquiring Sprint, especially in the Midwest and Northern Plains, but still has gaps in very remote areas. AT&T tends to be strongest in parts of the South, Texas, and the Southeast. The FCC’s broadband coverage tool at broadbandmap.fcc.gov lets you enter your specific address and see which networks are mapped as available. Consumer Cellular has the unique advantage of running on both AT&T and T-Mobile networks simultaneously β€” you can even choose different networks for different lines on the same account, which is useful in households where different areas of the property have different signal quality. If no major network covers your address, Starlink satellite internet with a cellular voice add-on may be the only viable option.
πŸ—ΊοΈ Check FCC coverage at your address: broadbandmap.fcc.gov πŸ‘₯ Ask a neighbor β€” real-world signal beats any map πŸ”„ Consumer Cellular: run AT&T + T-Mobile networks on same account ⚠️ All coverage maps are optimistic β€” test before committing long-term
What hidden fees should I watch out for with senior cell phone plans?
HIDDEN FEES Β· FINE PRINT
Senior cell phone plan marketing is some of the most misleading in the wireless industry. Here are the most common traps. First, AutoPay penalties: most advertised prices require AutoPay β€” without it, plans like T-Mobile’s 55+ tier add $5/line/month. Second, the bank account requirement: some carriers only give the AutoPay discount if you link a bank account, not a credit card β€” add $10/line if you prefer card payments. Third, taxes and regulatory fees: T-Mobile alone charges a $4.49/line Regulatory Programs and Telco Recovery Fee β€” that’s not a government tax, just a carrier add-on. Budget an extra $5–$10/month beyond any advertised price for taxes and fees. Fourth, two-line requirements: Verizon’s Florida 55+ plan requires at least two lines β€” the per-line savings disappear if you only need one. Fifth, financing phone payments: carriers often bundle a “free phone” that is actually financed over 24 months, tying you to the plan even if there’s no formal contract. Always ask what happens to your phone installments if you cancel service. There are no cancellation fees on month-to-month plans, but phone installment balances become due immediately if you leave.
πŸ’³ AutoPay: use bank account for lowest price β€” credit card may cost $10/mo more πŸ“ƒ Ask specifically: “What will my exact all-in monthly bill be, including fees?” πŸ“± “Free phone” offers: ask what the 24-month total is ⚠️ Two-line deals only save money if you actually need two lines
My current carrier keeps raising my bill β€” is it worth switching?
SWITCHING Β· SAVE MONEY
Right now is actually one of the best moments to switch β€” all three major carriers are losing customers and actively competing for new sign-ups. Price increases on legacy plans are common because carriers know that switching feels like a hassle, so many customers absorb the hike rather than change. The actual switch process is easier than most people realize: number porting takes one to three business days, the new carrier handles the paperwork, and Consumer Cellular, T-Mobile, and Mint Mobile all offer no-contract service with a trial period. Consumer Cellular offers a 30-day risk-free trial (45 days for AARP members). Mint Mobile’s 3-month prepay works as a test period β€” if you don’t love it after three months, you’re not locked in further. Before switching, check three things: confirm the new carrier has good coverage at your home address, verify your existing phone is compatible with the new network (call the new carrier with your phone’s IMEI number β€” found in Settings), and never cancel your old service before the number port is complete. The potential savings are real: seniors switching from an old Verizon or AT&T unlimited plan at $85–$95/month to Consumer Cellular or T-Mobile’s 55+ tier can save $40–$50/month β€” that is $480–$600 per year.
πŸ“± Find your phone’s IMEI: Settings β†’ About Phone (Android) or Settings β†’ General β†’ About (iPhone) πŸ”’ Never cancel old service until number transfer is complete πŸ’° Switching savings: up to $600/year vs. legacy big-carrier plans πŸ›‘οΈ Use trial periods: Consumer Cellular (30–45 days), Mint Mobile (3 months)
I want a simple phone with big buttons β€” will those work with any plan?
SIMPLE PHONES Β· BIG BUTTONS
Yes β€” simple phones with large buttons, raised keys, and loud speakers work with virtually every plan in this guide. The two most recommended options for seniors who want a dedicated simple phone are the Lively Flip2 (available only through Lively’s service, includes an urgent response button and hearing aid compatibility) and the TCL Classic flip phone available through AT&T for $74.99. T-Mobile and Consumer Cellular both carry simple phone options as well. If you already have a flip phone or basic phone you like, check whether it is “unlocked” β€” meaning it works on any carrier’s SIM card. Unlocked GSM phones work on T-Mobile, AT&T, Consumer Cellular, and Mint Mobile’s networks. Verizon and Visible use a different technical standard (CDMA/LTE), and older Verizon flip phones often only work on Verizon’s network. To check if your existing phone is unlocked, call your current carrier and ask β€” federal law requires carriers to unlock paid-off phones on request. You can also confirm compatibility with any new carrier by giving them your phone’s IMEI number before switching.
πŸ“ž Lively Flip2: purpose-built senior flip with Urgent Response button πŸ“± TCL Classic flip: $74.99 on AT&T, large keys, loud speaker πŸ”“ Already have a phone? Ask carrier to confirm it’s unlocked πŸ”’ IMEI check: give new carrier your IMEI to verify compatibility before switching
πŸ“ Find Plans, Stores & Help Near You

Use the buttons below to find phone stores, check carrier coverage, and locate tech assistance near your location. Always verify plan details and pricing directly with the carrier before signing up.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Key Links & Contacts
πŸ†“ Government Lifeline program: lifelinesupport.org 🏷️ Consumer Cellular + AARP deal: aarp.org/membership/benefits/tech/consumer-cellular πŸ“Ά T-Mobile 55+ plans: t-mobile.com/cell-phone-plans/unlimited-55-senior-discount-plans πŸ“± AT&T senior plan (Florida): att.com/plans/unlimited-data-plans πŸ”΅ Visible by Verizon (non-Florida): visible.com πŸ†˜ Lively / Jitterbug phones: lively.com πŸ—ΊοΈ FCC coverage map: broadbandmap.fcc.gov πŸ’š Mint Mobile 55+ plan: mintmobile.com πŸ“ž Port your number: give new carrier current account # + PIN πŸ” IMEI compatibility check: ask new carrier before you switch
βœ… 5-Step Checklist Before Choosing a Senior Cell Phone Plan
  • Step 1: Check Lifeline eligibility first. If you receive Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, or Veterans Pension, visit lifelinesupport.org β€” you may qualify for completely free phone service.
  • Step 2: Look up your actual data usage from last month. Check Settings β†’ Cellular (iPhone) or Settings β†’ Network (Android). Most seniors use under 2 GB/month and do not need unlimited.
  • Step 3: Check coverage at your home address. Visit the coverage maps at T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon’s websites. Better yet, ask a neighbor which carrier they use and how the signal is.
  • Step 4: If you are an AARP member, go to aarp.org/membership/benefits/tech/consumer-cellular before buying anywhere β€” the AARP exclusive deal often beats anything you’d find by shopping individually. If not an AARP member, check whether the $16/year membership pays for itself through plan savings (it usually does).
  • Step 5: Use trial periods before committing. Consumer Cellular offers 30 days (45 for AARP members). Never cancel your old service yourself β€” let the new carrier handle the number transfer, or you risk permanently losing your phone number.

Cell phone plan pricing, senior discounts, carrier promotions, and Lifeline program details are set by carriers and the FCC and change frequently. Prices shown reflect reported current U.S. rates as of the most recent update and may vary by location, promotional availability, and individual account setup. AT&T’s 55+ senior plan availability in states outside Florida should be confirmed directly with AT&T before ordering. Always verify pricing, coverage, and eligibility directly with your chosen carrier before switching. This page has no affiliation with T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon, Consumer Cellular, Mint Mobile, Lively, or any other carrier or service mentioned.

Recommended Reads

  1. 10 Cheapest Phone Plans with Unlimited Everything
  2. 12 Best Cell Phone Deals Right Now
  3. AARP Verizon Discount β€” What Seniors Actually Get & What to Do Instead
  4. T-Mobile Senior Plan β€” The $15 Option & Every 55+ Plan Explained
  5. Best T-Mobile Discounts for Seniors
  6. Does Verizon Offer Senior Discounts?
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›οΈ Shopping & Reviews
  • πŸ›’ Retail & Memberships
  • πŸ›‘οΈ Insurance (Auto, Life & Medicare)
  • πŸ›°οΈ Starlink

Recent Posts

  • Cigna Dental Plans for Seniors β€” Real Costs, What’s Covered, the Waiting Period Fine Print
  • Health Plans for Seniors β€” What’s Actually Different Between Your Options
  • ACLU Membership Near Me
  • Best Prescription Drug Plans for Seniors on Medicare
  • Delta Dental Plans for Seniors β€” Real Costs, What’s Actually Covered, & the Waiting Period Trap Most People Miss

Latest Comments

  1. 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…

  2. 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…

  3. 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…

  4. Budget Seniors on YouTube TV Cost Per Month for SeniorsApril 21, 2026

    Great news for Boston-area viewers β€” ABC is indeed available on YouTube TV in the Boston market, and understanding exactly…

  5. Thomas W Gardner Jr on YouTube TV Cost Per Month for SeniorsApril 20, 2026

    Do any of your plans include ABC in the Boston market?

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