**T-Mobile Unveils Price Increases for Legacy Plans**
T-Mobile is set to initiate another wave of price hikes, specifically targeting users on older, legacy plans.
A **confidential memo acquired by CNET** disclosed that the carrier would start increasing prices for some customers this week. John Freier, head of T-Mobile’s consumer division, linked the increases to “escalating costs over the past several years.”
Customers affected by the price adjustment have begun to receive notifications this week. A **Reddit user posted a screenshot** of a text message from T-Mobile that informed them of the modification.
“For the first time in almost ten years, we are updating the pricing of select older monthly service plans,” the message purportedly mentioned. “Beginning on 4/2/2025, your phone plan will rise by $5 per line monthly. You will retain all the benefits you currently enjoy, and your rate plan type and bill due date will stay unchanged.”
### Continuous Price Changes
This recent increase continues a series of **“price adjustments”** that T-Mobile initiated last year. Before this, the carrier raised rates by either $2 or $5 monthly, depending on the plan. The plans affected included:
– **Simple Choice Plan** (introduced in 2013)
– **T-Mobile One Plan** (introduced in 2016)
– **Magenta and Magenta Max Plans** (introduced in 2019 and 2021, respectively)
– Certain **T-Mobile business customers**
Nonetheless, customers on T-Mobile’s **Go5G, Go5G Plus, and Go5G Next plans**, along with those who have a **Price Lock guarantee**, will remain unaffected.
T-Mobile justified the price increments, asserting that “even with these minor adjustments, on average, T-Mobile customers spend less.”
### Which Plans Are Impacted?
T-Mobile has not publicly identified which plans are affected, leaving many customers unclear. However, from **Reddit conversations**, it seems that **Magenta MAX and T-Mobile ONE plans** are among those impacted.
Customers were referred to an **FAQ page on T-Mobile’s website**, but the company did not clarify which plans are included in the price increase. The FAQ does confirm that T-Mobile’s **Un-contract Promise** is still valid, meaning customers unhappy with the increase have **60 days to inform T-Mobile if they decide to leave**. If they opt to do so, T-Mobile will cover their **final month of recurring charges**.