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Can I Replace My Basic Phone To A Smartphone With Verizon 2 Year Contract

Can you still upgrade verizon phone when 2 year contract hasn't ended yet?

You have to pay full price. The voyager right now is $409.99 full price, $199.99 with 2-yr contract.

If you buy a replacement phone and activate it on your verizon account does it extend your contract?

I want to buy a new phone on ebay and switch it out with my old phone by activating it on my verizon wireless account online but I want to know if it will extend my contract.

I signed a 2 year contract with Verizon a couple of months ago, and now I want to switch phones. I've already bought the replacement phone online. How would I do that without being charged a huge fee?

If you purchased the phone yourself, then generally* you can activate it without changing your contract, and without any changes to your monthly bill. If you log in to the My Verizon web site you can activate the phone from there, or you can call Verizon customer care and they can activate the phone for you. * Some phones require different features from the mobile network, and in addition, some phones are linked with specific pricing plans. If your old phone and new phone don't work with the same network features, or if your new phones doesn't work on the same pricing plan as your old phone, you may need to change features and plans. You may be able to make these changes without affecting your contract, but that depends on what changes they are, and what your current plan is. If you get into that situation, it's best to call Verizon and talk to them about it.

Will Verizon replace a broken cell phone?

I have the samsung trance and bought it a couple months ago. Today it fell for the first time and the screen shattered. It turns on but the screen is just white. Will I be able to get the phone replace? also, i have a 2 year contract...

Does buying a new sim card renew your contract? (Verizon)?

I'm purchasing a droid bionic 4g phone off of eBay with no service to replace my old droid 2 3G phone. The catch or at least I see it as one is the bionic doesn't come with a sim card. Questions:
1. Will I be able to purchase a new 4g sim card, no questions asked and not renew my current contract?
2. Can I use my old 3G sim card in the droid bionic and still use the 4g capabilities?
Thanks in advance!

Can I buy a new Verizon phone without my parents?

I checked my information online through "my verizon" and saw that I was eligible for a phone upgrade. One phone I want is free with my 2 year re-sign and another is $30 with my mail in rebate. I'd like to be able to just go when I have free time, which is never at the same time as my parents. I have all the account information (last 4 of social, etc) so would they let me do this without them present? I'm not changing anything, I just want to resign my contract and get a new phone!

It's not that they don't know I'm doing it, but I'm 23 years old & would like to run errands without having my parent there. I'm just questioning Verizon's policy in this.

Replacing a stolen verizon Android phone?

Earlier today, my phone was stolen at school. If I was to not find it, I was planning on replacing it with a new phone. One person said that it costs cheaper to just cancel the plan and everything and start over than to just upgrade my phone (I could have gotten a new phone next month) and pay all the expenses. I looked on the verizon faq page for an answer but I don't have total equipment coverage. What should I do?

How do I get out of my Verizon contract without paying a termination fee?

Danielle is right. If your carrier makes an important change (to price, plan, or terms) that would reasonably affect your decision-making, then you have the right to object to the change and leave with no ETF. The contract jargon carriers use is "materially adverse," another way of saying the same thing.Danielle is also correct that you can often find news of such changes on blogs and news sites. But this in an inefficient use of time. A more efficient way to stay apprised of actionable changes is to use a free monitoring service like CellBreaker. You simply tell CB your email and carrier, and they'll notify you the moment your carrier makes an actionable change.This is also superior to the blog-surfing approach b/c of the brief window of opportunity the contract gives you for objecting. For example, if the contract allows you to object and leave ETF-free for only thirty days after the change, you could only hope that you'd stumble across the blog early enough in that thirty-day period that you still have time left to object and leave. Chances are, by relying only on the blog-surfing approach, you'll probably miss more opportunities than you catch.

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