Los Angeles Times

Users keeping phones longer

Consumers are more hesitant to upgrade as costs for new devices increase, a report says.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga

People are holding on to their aging smartphone­s longer, squeezing out a few more months of use before trading them in, a report indicates.

In the United States, iPhones traded in between July 1 and Sept. 30 were 2.92 years old on average, up from 2.37 years old in the same period two years earlier, according to data from Hyla Mobile Inc.

Android users swapped out their phones a little faster. At the time of trade-in, the average Android phone was 2.66 years old, up from 2.44 years old in the same period in 2016, Hyla said. Hyla, a company that focuses on the secondary-use market for smartphone­s, provides analytics and device tradein programs for businesses.

Analysts said the rising cost of new smartphone­s might give U.S. consumers pause when they’re deciding whether to upgrade. The iPhone XS, for example, starts at $999. The Samsung Galaxy S9 starts at $720. When the iPhone 7 debuted in 2016, it started at $649. That same year, the Samsung Galaxy S7 was released and sold for about $700 without a contract, though carriers offered discounts.

Because of rising costs, carriers have eliminated previous deals that gave customers a subsidized phone upon signing a two-year contract. That was financiall­y viable for carriers when phones cost $300 or $400, but not when they cost $800 to $1,200, said Biju Nair, chief executive of Hyla Mobile.

Instead, carriers now offer payment plans under which the buyer of a phone can pay a monthly fee for a certain period of time — say, two years — and then owns it outright. Some people aren’t eager to take on monthly fees for a new phone right after they’ve paid off the last one.

“When your payments are done … all of a sudden, you don’t have to pay that additional fee,” said Brad Akyuz, research director for NPD Group’s connected intelligen­ce research practice. “[There’s a] psychologi­cal impact there.” And from a tech standpoint, the industry recently “hasn’t seen a major innovation out there that would foster users to immediatel­y change their devices,” he said.

Upgrades to phone features and specificat­ions are often minimal between generation­s of the same device, and better software updates from Apple and Android have done a good job of enabling older devices to access some of the same features and security patches as newer phones, said Anthony Scarsella, mobile phones research manager at market intelligen­ce firm IDC.

Repair services have also sprouted up to keep older phones working longer, he said. That might become an even bigger factor in the future: This week, a rule change took effect that makes it easier for people to fix their own phones (or get a repair shop to do it) without breaking copyright law.

“When the average consumer is looking at these prices and looking at these features coming out of these new phones, they’re kind of perceiving, ‘Well, is there really that much difference?’ ” Nair said. “The general sense is, ‘Well, my phone is currently good enough.’ ”

Analysts said they expect this trend to continue, at least until there is a major technologi­cal breakthrou­gh. That might happen next year when more 5G devices are introduced to the market, Akyuz said.

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