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Mint Mobile’s $30/month 3-month plan delivers unlimited talk, text, and data on T-Mobile’s expansive 5G network. The included 3-in-1 SIM card supports all phone sizes and easy BYOP activation. Ideal for budget-conscious professionals seeking reliable, high-speed connectivity without long-term contracts or surprise fees.


















| ASIN | B08FXRTYPH |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,737 in Cell Phones & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Cell Phones & Accessories ) #2 in Cell Phone SIM Cards |
| Brand | Mint Mobile |
| Cellular Technology | 5G |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 18,477 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 6"L x 4"W |
| Manufacturer | Mint Mobile |
| Mfr Part Number | 3-Month Plan, Unlimited |
| Model Number | 3-Month Plan, Unlimited |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 6"L x 4"W |
| Service Provider | T-Mobile |
| Smart Home Compatibility | Not Smart Home Compatible |
| UPC | 853455004617 |
K**L
Bang for the bucks, supports 5G, with hotspot
2024-06 update: years of subscription, mint roaming is awesome! It has been a couple years since I started my trial. I did acknowledge that T-Mobile is/has acquiring/acquired Mint, I do wish there is no further change to the existing plan, but increasing the data allowance would be awesome. I did travel to Canada and Germany this year, and I was able to roam in both countries by purchasing the mint roaming pass. This is rare for prepaid services I have to say. 2022-07 update: hotspot also works under 5G Had to make some travels in the past month, I used the hotspot feature, and did a speed test. The hotspot speed tested on my laptop is the same as the one on the phone, which is 5G speed not capped at 4G/LTE or any lower speed. Gotta recommend this. Also I renewed again. Coverage still depends on T-Mobile. 2021-12 update: eSIM is available! If you need help to convert to eSIM, navigate to the online portal and request it for free. Takes about 5 minutes. 2020-10 update: T-Mobile turned on 5G in my area. I saw 5G on my Samsung Note 20, did a speed test, in the ball park of 200Mbps. Hence, when not congested, performance is indeed rather nice. Latency is in mid 50 ms. 2020 - 03 Update: I renewed for another 12 months. I don't see a reason to leave. Need more info? Scroll down! UPDATE: IOS Wi-Fi calling worked. Please update your system to iOS11+. It has been 3 months, I renewed as annual plan. The past 3 months experiences were pleasant. If you need more details, keep scrolling down! I have been using different prepaid services for my personal phone since my business phone from the company handles most of my calls. Hence, I can risk my own device to try out all the possibilities and save a couple dollars. Hereby, let me break down into pros and cons: ============================================================================== Pros: 1. Big amount of data with hotspot tethering supported! Okay, for under $30 per month excluding the tax and fees, you can't find anything like this. If you purchase this on sale, yes, it will be 5GB (NOW WITH 8GB) per month for you for 3 months. 2. Wi-Fi calling on Android actually works! (With supported phones) With Pixel XL and another T-Mobile Samsung phone, I was able to get Wi-Fi calling working, simply by registering online. Do make sure to check your phone compatibility. iPhone from my wife simply can't do it. Please bear that in mind. ( Worked with new iOS update! ) Make sure you update your E911 address on the website after the activation. 3. Hassle free activation with no credit card needed for sign up! Well, if you are not sure if you will stick around with it, and worry about auto charge, during the sign up period, you can skip for adding credit card. And activation only requires the ACT CODE on the back of the card, takes about 1 minute to activate. 4. Cute and elegant account management interface. My wife likes the sim card and the mascot design, you can't deny it. And the web management interface is WAYYYYYY better than some of those competitors. You can easily get the most you needed from it. But, how often do you need to log in anyway? 5. Number good for banks and short-codes Yes, your banks and short-code service will go through like a breeze. ================================================================================== Now, lets talk about Cons: 1. Data de-prioritization This thing is prepaid as well. So it is subject to throttling. That is generally known as de-prioritization. Since you are paying for the service with a discount. So you are not in the fast lane always. During the busy time in downtown Chicago, Seattle, and San Francisco, this card will speed lower. I saw some posts actually complain about the speed, but most of them didn't factor in this issue. The speed is not painfully slow unless you go to the stadium on a game day. I'd suggest on Game Day, just concentrate on the game and family rather than Instagram, makes you a gentleman. (Well, when you have to, since stuff won't load... Like 0.02 mbps for download...) But yes, off-busy time, I had same fast speed across boards as the speed from postpaid tmobile business plan. 2. Customer service Well, the customer service waiting time over the phone is... long. So grab a cup of coffee when you call. 3. Number pool Well, they must withdraw the number from a pool of prepaid, then depending on your luck. If the previous owner had the number signed up for some ghetto things, you will get spam calls and so. You folks might ask National Do Not Call List... Okay, here is a thing, it takes 30 days for the system to completely register your account. ==================================================================================== Overall, what do I think? I'll stick around for 3 months, at least. (I mean, I paid for this already, no refund at this point...) Also, if after 3 month, new customer if and only if gets the same $20 for 3 months, then yes. If it would be your primary phone and you need to do your next millionaire job with your service, then I guess no, go postpaid. If you are a person like me, who only uses data for none crazy things, like just social media, email, web browsing, or 9GAG on the go. You'd be fine. Streaming? Not so much... Good luck and have fun folks! Keep the SIM card, cuz it is cute!
T**R
Worth every penny talk to real folks too
Loved the service. U can get ur phone plan cheap if u pay up ahead of time. Like 45 is 3 months unlimited so basically 15.00 a month but u have to pay it quarterly if u do 6 months or a year saves u money in long run. They even called me n told me I picked a plan that was too high according to my usage n so I downgraded. Um NEVER has a company called me to tell me I'm paying too much! N Ryan Reynolds even left a pre-recorded message wishing me & a million other moms to Have a Happy Mother's day... Can u say momma's boy haha
A**R
I should have done this long ago - Updated
November 19, 2018 update - It's been one month today. Still couldn't be happier. I spent a week on vacation. No problem with service. Wireless internet went out for a couple hours while I was at the resort. I used my phone as a hotspot. It's been a really good experience. I thought my plan month was over tomorrow, so I had planned to run out my data tonight (I only used 2.7GB) by using my phone as a hotspot for my Roku (it eats about 2.3GB/hour) to see how fast the non-4G LTE data is. The phone plan includes unlimited data, you just pay for the 4G LTE data, after that you get slower data. How much slower is the question. That will have to wait until next month because I got a text earlier saying my second month had started. Stay tuned for the answer next month. Mint is great. October 22, 2018 - I was an AT&T customer for ~10 years @ $80/month (unlimited talk & text w/ 2GB/month). I could go into all the details of why I didn’t change before now, but I’ll save you the pain of reading that and me typing it. It’s going to be a long story anyway. I got an offer in the mail from Spectrum Mobile for unlimited talk & text with either unlimited data ($45/month) or pay for what you use ($15/GB). So, I looked at the phones they offered and didn’t like any of them. After a little research, I decided to buy a Moto G6 from Amazon. I got the phone, decided I liked it and then called Spectrum Mobile to send me a SIM card. Only to find out that they only support the phones they offer (I guess they’re more into the business of selling phones). OK, bummer. I then searched for cell phone plans in Amazon. Mint came up. I ordered the starter kit. It came two days later. I put in the first SIM and after a little easy-to-follow setup (I had to manually put in my APN information, but the directions were no problem at all), I was off and running. My house is in an AT&T dead zone (even though I live in Orlando FL). I had T-Mobile before and it was a dead zone too, so I thought that was my fate. Not so. As soon as I had the Mint card up and running, I placed a couple test calls from my house and was told I sounded perfect. Later, I noticed that my phone was saying it was using Wi-Fi calling. I'm not sure if this is a standard feature now, or just the G6, or part of Mint, but I know my old phone didn’t have it (one review that I read talked about having issues setting this up, I didn't it just magically appeared - I didn't even know it was an option). OK, I had to rerun the phone test. So, I turned off my Wi-Fi and did the test calls again. Same result, I sounded totally clear. I know it doesn’t sound like much, but before, I could hear people perfectly, but they couldn’t hear me half the time. MAJOR irritation. OK, on with my story. I then drove around and placed several calls from other areas that had been problem areas. Same result. I sounded perfect. I tried from inside a building where I was totally FUBAR before. No problems. So far so good. I tried out the mobile data. Sites loaded quickly and without any trouble. I decided to run a speed test. It got to about 35MB/s before I stopped it. In the time that I was running the test, it used 35MB of the 100MB on the test card, but I had the information I needed. Plenty of speed. So, the next morning, I got on the AT&T site and reset my phone account PIN (this was a little bit of a pain, but only because the AT&T website instructions were incomplete so I had to search for the reset link). You need this to take your phone number over. So, then I stuck in the second SIM card from the starter kit and followed the instructions. After reading all the legalese, I signed up and purchased the 3 months of 5GB/month plan (there were $3.41 tax and additional charges, so my total was $58.41 after the $5 back from the starter kit refund). This was about noon. At the end, it said it would take up to 48 hours to switch my old number over. My old cell SIM became inactive almost immediately. After a few minutes, my new phone rang to my old number when I called from a land line, but it was on Wi-Fi calling. It took a couple more hours for it to ring with my phone Wi-Fi off. It took a while longer for the mobile data to kick in, but by 6pm it was fully up and running. So far, so good. I played around with the app some. It is very intuitive and easy to use, so much better than the AT&T app that is just a continual struggle. It doesn’t look like it will be any problem to extend my service through the app when the time comes. Summary, Mint gets an A+ so far. Easy to setup and everything seems to work perfectly. If you’re looking for a phone, the Moto G6 also seems very nice. The screen’s not quite as wide as my old LG Optimus Pro (70mm vs. 73mm), but it’s taller (especially when you activate the Moto gestures to eliminate the wasted space associated with the Android on-screen navigation buttons). Battery life is excellent (my LG had replaceable batteries, which was cool, but the longer life of the Moto certainly compensates). Assuming the next 3 months go well, I’ll extend to the 1 year plan so I can keep the low monthly cost. I should have done this long ago. I hope this review was helpful (and not too long).
I**Y
Everything worked perfect..... for one day
Probably like most people, I got a little tired of paying a LOT of money for mobile phone service. Our 2 phones and 1 cellular iPad were costing $133 a month with 10 GB of data. I decided to try Mint Service on my iPad as it would not disrupt the phone numbers, while I was trying the service out. You activate the service from the Mint web site, put in the SIM card and away you go. No muss, no fuss. Mint uses T-Mobile towers, so if you can get T-Mobile reception you should be good to go. After the successful iPad experiment, I ordered 2 more SIMS for our phones. Total time between activating the cards, inserting the SIM and having the number ported over from Verizon was under 7 minutes. Probably another minute to set up the Voice Mail. Be aware, that this is pre-paid service, as supposed to the normal post paid contract. Difference is you prepay 3 months, 6 months or 12 months. The longer you prepay, the cheaper the service. In our case we have 3 GB of data per phone for $15 per month apiece by prepaying for 12 months. My iPad I have 8 GB of data and it is $20 a month. The total for all 3 phones is $54.16 ( tax and 911 fees) a month versus the $133 I was paying Verizon and my data increased from 10 GB to 14 GB per month. Dropping my bill 60% and increasing my data by 40% was a good use of my time. I have had the SIM cards in for a few days now but all is working just as it was before. If there is any reason to update this review, I will do so. Update: first time I have taken a review from 5 star to 1 star. After two days, the voice mail on my iPhone switched from being on the iPhone to now having to dial into another system to access it. In addition, there is no message that alerts you there is a Voice Mail. Mint is unable to solve this and their support people have no access to tech support. They open up a case and I am supposed to hear back in 24-48 hours. Well 24 hours has passed with no resolution. Initially they tried to blame it on Apple, but I was having none of that. This is a Mint problem that only they can solve. I can not wait much longer to get this resolved and looks like I am going to have to go back to Verizon and their high bills. But I guess you get what you pay for. Support people are not empowered to solve problems, other than standard non answers, like reboot, call Apple or take the SIM card out. I am way beyond underwhelmed.
C**D
Affordable, Quality Cell and Customer Service
T-Mobile - I had already been a T-Mobile prepaid customer on their 3GB $40 a month plus tax plan, but as I work from home most days anymore I began tracking my data usage for a few months and noticed at most I was hitting 1.2GB a month (typically below a gig the other months), nowhere near enough for me to justify continuing to pay for the plan, especially since after taxes my bill was $44.50. MINT - I came across Mint Mobile's ultra cheap plans and did some research before finally pulling the trigger on the trial SIM. I waited until just over a week was left on my last month with T-Mobile and activated the Mint trial SIM. When I activated I was on cell and not WiFi, which may have screwed up the app's activation as I was unable to get into my account in the app, though my trial service was working fine. I used it a little bit, but since the trial gives you a trial-specific number I did not use it much. I completely switched to Mint the day before my T-Mobile plan ended and bought 3 months of service for 2GB/month at $45. I followed their instructions to transfer my number and pay. I received text confirmation of my successful number transfer and payment, but for some reason I was unable to send or receive text messages as I was receiving an error message telling me that blocking was enabled on my account. I waited patiently for a couple of hours assuming my number transfer was still in process. Eventually I tried to make a call that ended up routing me directly to customer support. Customer support answered IMMEDIATELY without any wait time whatsoever. It was an honest and pleasant surprise as I expected most of their support to be online only since it's such a cheap service. The customer service rep confirmed that for some reason my transaction didn't properly go through. He was able to push it through while I was on the call with him. As a technical person I was also able to confirm the desired APN settings in Android while on the line. I was able to send and receive texts immediately and have not had an issue since - I have been using the service for two weeks now. Additionally, I was able to enable WiFi calling and texting through the mobile app. I have been able to use WiFi calling and texting without an issue, something that for some reason never worked properly on my T-Mobile account. Admittedly, I may have missed enabling the setting on my account or T-Mobile could have blocked it for prepaid users (I am unsure which was the case, likely could have been me not enabling the setting). I have had no issues with Mint Mobile thus far. I was continue to monitor my service through these 3 months as I will be traveling to the Jersey beach and Chicago on separate occasions, along with a couple other random areas. These should be good ways to measure service quality as I had not really gotten issues with T-Mobile in the past (aside from Chicago as I have not been there in the past). I am also keeping in mind that should any issues arise I can always switch my APN settings to leverage the prior fast.T-Mobile APN settings I used in the past. Thus far I would recommend this to anyone who does not need a lot of data who also does not travel to rural areas much as I know T-Mobile's coverage is hit or miss in those places once you deviate away from major highways (but even then coverage in my experience is highly subjective to the area, many are fine but on occasion random ones will be abysmal). Also, with the rollout of 600mhz underway for T-Mobile their network should be able to compete directly with VZW within the next couple of years.
A**I
Why would you pay $70 a month for the same service?
General Overview- Prior to using Mint mobile, I had been with AT&T for 10 years. I have been using MINT mobile for 6 months now, and I have no complaints. I purchased the 12gb/month at $25 per month. Mint sent me a nice letter with the sim card inside that can break down from a regular sim, microsim, or nanosim. Putting in the sim was as easy as taking a pin or paperclip, popping out the sim tray, and putting it in the phone. Of note, this $75 deal is for a 3 month package, and to maintain that rate, you must pay up front for a whole year. Honestly, it is so nice knowing I do not have to pay another phone bill until November this year. Data plans- At the time of this posting, Mint offers 3gb, 8gb, and 12gb plans with prices of $15, $20, and $25 per month respectively. When you buy in bulk, the more you save. Many people I have talked to about Mint mobile are skeptical because they do not offer an unlimited data option at this time. I do not think people realize how much data they actually use. Mint plans all have unlimited talk and text in the US and after reviewing my monthly usage, I realized that even the 12gb plan I have is too much and when I renew I will be going to the 8gb plan. Think about it, at home you are on wifi and at work you are on wifi. Unlimited data is a scam given by big phone companies to make you pay for more than what you need. Call quality- I do not see a difference in call quality compared to my prior carrier. I have only had one dropped call in 6 months of use. Data speeds appear to be adequate for daily use, obviously in high traffic areas such as concerts, data speeds and accessibility are negatively impacted. Referrals- You are able to refer others to mint mobile using your referral code. For example, my referral code is fbuyme/nBqV. When someone signs up using your link, both you and the person you referred get a $15 credit towards your next renewal bill. There was even a promotion once where if you refer 5 people you would get enough credit for 1-2 years of service depending on the plan you chose. I have referred friends and family to Mint and they also enjoy the service and especially the price! Promotions-Occasionally, there are deals where you can get 6 months free when you sign up or the service for a discounted rate, so if you are thinking of making the switch, wait for a promotion. From time to time, Mint opens an exclusive "underground" website, where users of mint can get exclusive clothing, gear, accessories, etc. Keep your own phone number -Moving my number from my prior carrier was seamless and extremely fast, when I input my number into the app my phone began working in minutes. I believe I had to call my prior phone company first because I was on the plan with another user, but after that its as simple as downloading the mint mobile app and inputting your phone number. Compatibility- I have used Mint only with iphones, and it works seamlessly. Mobile hot spot works. Visual voicemail works. Facetime quality is good. I do not have experience using mint on android devices, but there is a full compatibility checklist on Mint's website. Pretty much is a phone is unlocked, it should work. Mint works off the TMobile towers, so if your phone is Tmobile it should work too. A word of caution for Verizon and sprint phone owners (except for iphone). Verizon, Sprint, and US cellular phones use CDMA (a different signal) that does not require sim cards. An unlocked iPhone is compatible and uses a SIM card tray so there are no issues. I would imagine due to the lack of company exclusive phones like in the past, there should not be an issue as long as the phone is unlocked, but I would check the phone compatibility prior to making the switch. International- when on Wifi, you can make calls and send texts as normal via wifi calling, regardless if you use an iphone or android. International calls start at $0.06 per minute, and you load credit onto your account to maintain service out of the US. TLDR; Too Long, Didn't Read- Mint is a great phone company. If it makes a difference to you, Ryan Reynolds is now technically the owner and also uses Mint mobile.. that's how much trust he has in the company. Check your phone compatibility and input your zip into Mints website to ensure the best results. Use in the Chicagoland area has been great in my experience. I highly recommend Mint to everyone and will not switch to one of the big 4 until I live in a place where Mint doesn't work.
M**.
More Cell companies should do this!
1) I am a Prime member, if you are not your shipping will depend on which choice you choose during checkout. I ordered one day and it was here the next. I didn't have to drive to the strip mall, find a parking spot, or stand in line. Life is good. Product was packaged correctly and arrived in "new" condition. Pat on the back for packaging and shipping personnel. 2) I had used the Mint website to check that my phone (Moto G6) was compatible with their service. I downloaded the and installed the Mint Mobile app. I made sure I was on wi-fi and inserted the new sim. I opened the app and followed the instructions to activate the sim card. I had to change some settings in my phone and I found it easier to open their web site on my computer and pull up the settings rather than write them down or try to flip back and forth on my phone. 3) Service at my house was great. No issues at all. The app is simple and easy to use. Data speeds were as good or better than any service I have had here at my home. I have had Nextel, Ntelos, U.S. Cellular, Verizon, AT&T and Sprint. All had a good signal. 4) I had never had T-Mobile before and wanted to see if it also would work at my house and area. That's why I wanted to try Mint mobile. Final thoughts. This review is for the Mint Mobile Starter Kit. I stand by my 5 star rating for this kit but I did not choose to switch my mobile carrier and here's why. While the coverage was great at my house, just a few miles away I was unable to get a signal (central Virginia) and only spotty coverage on routes I travel most often. When entering city limits coverage picked up considerably but still dropped a few calls. When stationary, I had better results. The plan I have now, while twice the cost, has unlimited data and dropped fewer calls so I'll stick with it for now. If you have a compatible phone, are looking to save some money, and $5.00, I would recommend you give them a try using this starter kit. You only give them your name and email address and Zip code (for number assignment). No credit card or billing information. Depending on where you live and travel you may have better coverage than I do and you could save hundreds of dollars. Whew, this is more than I've typed in 5 years! Hope this helps anyone that's on the fence.
S**N
Great Price, Terrible Service
If I could sum up the Mint Mobile experience in one concise phrase it would be that - great price, terrible service. Let me start with the good - and there are some good points. - The Mint Mobile Starter Kit is an awesome concept and more providers should offer something like it. I was surprised that a cellular service provider offered a sim pack for $5.00 that would give me a limited, one-time-purchase trial of the service. If you don't like it, you're out $5.00 - if you do like it and continue to purchase service, they credit it off of your first month. This concept alone is unique and is a great way to trial the service. I wholly recommend doing it. - The service plans are inexpensive. Truth be told, Mint has some of the most inexpensive plans I've seen. Sure, to get the most bang-for-your-buck you'll have to commit to a year at a time (after your introductory plan and pricing), but still - $25.00/mo for unlimited talk, text, and 10GB of data? That's nearly unheard of! Yes, you miss out on some features such as roaming or international calling and texting (outside of the US, Canada, and Mexico), but these can be added on if absolutely necessary and, if they're not major requirements to you, can easily be written off due to the cost. Now onto the bad, and there's a lot of it: - Support. Mint's customer/technical support is ABYSMAL. I guess they needed to cut costs somewhere, but I don't think I've ever experienced such a slow, useless support system. The first time I installed Mint I was noticing extremely low upload speeds (0.10mbps - 0.30mbps) compared to my Cricket service (~6mbps - 8mbps) whereas the download speed was roughly the same. I called the Mint support number to inquire about this. The first support representative put me on hold and then promptly hung up on me. The second representative passed it off on "we're doing network maintenance". So I decided I would go to the community forums to see if anyone else had an answer or was experiencing the same issue. When I went to sign in, however, I received an error. Low and behold, the community forums were down. This was on 9/24/2018. It is now 9/28/2018 and the community forums are STILL down! Furthermore, I sent an email on 9/24 to their support and did not receive a response until 9/27 - the response simply asked me to try signing in again and tell them if it worked. It didn't, so I responded to the email and have not yet received a response. It seems their tactic is to wait for three days, hope it fixes itself, and ask you to try again. Mint's support is by far the worst I've ever experienced so hope nothing breaks. - Spotty/slow service and/or deprioritization. As an MVNO, it's understandable that Mint would be deprioritized - especially as a T-Mobile MVNO as T-Mobile is known to heavily deprioritize MVNO users during peak hours. While this depends on your region, from the hours of 10:00am to around mid-night I would classify my LTE speeds as slow. Around 6 - 8mbps download and abysmal uploads of 0.20 - 0.30 (sometimes the test fails on the upload portion). After around 12:00am however my speeds will kick up to 22 - 24mbps down and up to 2 - 3mbps up. When not being deprioritized the speeds are pretty good (aside from upload), but during pretty much all hours of daylight the speeds are nothing special and data service is being deprioritized. For reference, I live in metro Phoenix. - The number assigned to me by Mint was apparently already on a bunch of scam/spam call lists. This isn't inherently Mint's fault, but it would be nice if they would allow me to generate a new number to avoid this - a feature that they, unfortunately, lack. So if you get a bad number when signing up for Mint, you're stuck with it unless you want to try manually requesting a new number (something I have yet to try as their support team is so bad and I really don't want to have to deal with them). - Setting up the service upon receiving a new SIM can be annoying due to some nuances. Sure, it's not extremely hard, but it can definitely be frustrating if you're new to the experience. The activation codes for the SIM cards that I received came with a random letter F at the end of them. Turns out that this wasn't actually a part of the activation code and I couldn't activate the SIM card until I found out that the F shouldn't be there. I was then advised during setup that I would receive an automated text explaining how to set up the APN. That text never came, so I had to manually look it up myself. In some instances, however, you may not even need to use your APN - your phone might automatically set up a T-Mobile one. This depends on your phone, however. As I am familiar with this process, these were minor annoyances and something I could easily work around, but for someone totally new to this experience, I could see it being a point of frustration and causing confusion. All in all, if you don't mind terrible support, broken things remaining broken for an indefinite period of time, and constantly deprioritized/slow data and you're only interested in the price point and unlimited talk/text, Mint definitely is not a bad option - its definitely one of the best price points I've seen. If you're looking for a seamless experience, good data speeds, and consistently working features, however, you may want to consider looking elsewhere.
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