I've always been fascinated by the 'show me the tax' mindset. I'm probably in the minority but an all inclusive, up front pricing structure will always make me happier than one that has a base + taxes + fees.
I have no illusions of being able to convince you that one pricing structure is 'better' than another. But there are a lot of us out there who really don't want to know about all the components of the price.
I signed up for a tmobile plan the other day. I talked to them online and then in a call, and asked what the taxes and surcharges would be. They said they could not tell me because it was impossible for them do so until after they generated my first bill (which coincidentally is the point at which it is too late to cancel). I did try using logic ("you already have code to calculate tax") but that obviously did not work.
Even if what you say is an issue, they can still show totals just as plane tickets do. They can say the total is $55/mo of which $13 is taxes.
I'm not sure this actually helps you, but I'm pretty sure there's a statutory Buyer's Remorse period where you can cancel within 14 days with no penalty.
It's not -- I just signed up for a postpaid plan on T-Mobile yesterday, and the receipts included the first and second months' bills (for service and taxes).
If you do it on the web they make it very plain that $0 is due now. They do say the plan will be $45/month but there is absolutely no indication what their additional fees will be nor what the taxes will.
I'm in California. Maybe you are in a state where they actually have to provide this information?
I'm in Oklahoma, which traditionally doesn't have much in the way of consumer protection or information laws. It's possible, though I think it's probably because I bought it in a physical store.
Totally agree. Check out condointernet.net for a great example of an amazing product with a flat fee of 60 bucks a month for 100mb down, no contract required. I lived in Seattle the last two years and was blown away by their service, pricing, and the overall experience. We need more like them.
I've always been fascinated by the 'show me the tax' mindset. I'm probably in the minority but an all inclusive, up front pricing structure will always make me happier than one that has a base + taxes + fees.
I have no illusions of being able to convince you that one pricing structure is 'better' than another. But there are a lot of us out there who really don't want to know about all the components of the price.