Irish Independent

Three blames rising costs for €5 a month hike

- Adrian Weckler Technology Editor

MOBILE operator Three is raising its monthly prices by up to €5, blaming costs and new roaming regulation­s.

Around 900,000 of its bill pay customers will pay €5 a month more than their existing contract plans, while 700,000 prepay customers will now have to pay a minimum of €20 for a top-up.

There will be a shortened credit period for each top-up and no more free weekend calls to rival operators.

The company will begin issuing notices of the price rises to customers today, offering them the opportunit­y to cancel existing contracts. Phones included in such contracts are kept by customers by convention.

“This is the first time that Three has revised the cost of its core portfolio in a number of years,” said a spokeswoma­n. “These changes are a direct result of the increase in costs of doing business. Notwithsta­nding the revisions, we still offer some of the most competitiv­e plans on the market that are affordable and offer real value to our customers.”

Until now, prepay customers with the operator were able to top up by €5, €10 and €15.

Three has also served notice that it will not give customers a full “roam like home” data allowance after a new EU law on the issue takes effect in June.

While the law is supposed to let people use as much data, calls and texts when travelling across the EU, mobile operators believe they have found a way to limit its applicatio­n on data allowances.

Three is to change the wording of its plans, describing its current ‘all you can eat’ data allowances as “service benefits” rather than being part of the “core plan”.

Using this combinatio­n of words allows mobile operators to legally avoid giving customers access to the full level of mobile data when travelling in the EU, according to industry sources. Instead of ‘all you can eat’ data, bill pay customers with Three will now get between 1GB and 7GB of data abroad, depending on whether their monthly bill pay plan costs €30, €45 or €60.

The Irish Independen­t understand­s that other Irish mobile operators are now set to follow suit with plans to prevent customers getting their full domestic data allowances when roaming in the EU.

A spokesman for Meteor and Eir said that the operators will not provide the same level of mobile data for customers travelling in the EU, while a spokeswoma­n for Virgin Mobile said that it is reviewing its plans. However, a spokeswoma­n for Vodafone said that the operator will honour its domestic data plans for customers travelling in the EU with no extra costs.

Spokespers­ons for Tesco Mobile and iD did not return calls on the issue.

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