AT&T expands unlimited plan to all customers, single line pricing starts at $100
In a bid to stay current amid recently increased competition, AT&T on Thursday said it will make a new AT&T Unlimited Data Plan available to all post-paid customers on Friday, with tiers starting at $100 for a single user.

Both consumers and business customers can take advantage of the new plan pricing, which includes unlimited talk, text and data on four lines for $180 a month. Business customers can get an even better deal with corporate discounts.
Prior to the change, users looking to sign up for unlimited data were required to also hold a DirecTV or U-Verse account.
AT&T confirmed details of the new unlimited tier to AppleInsider, saying single-line plans cost $100 with each additional line coming in at $40. Though a four-line example is being used to advertise the plan, customers can add additional unlimited users to their account as needed.
As noted in today's press release, the fourth line is essentially free via a monthly bill credit that starts after two billing cycles. Customers will have to pay $220 per month until the credit kicks in.
The usual trimmings are also included in the plan, allowing users to make unlimited calls from the U.S. to Canada and Mexico and send unlimited texts to over 120 countries. Customers who opt in to the free Roam North America feature can take advantage of unlimited talk, text and data in Canada and Mexico with no roaming charges.
"We're offering unlimited entertainment on the nation's best data network where and when you want to enjoy more of what you love," said David Christopher, Chief Marketing Officer of the AT&T Entertainment Group.
According to the fine print, AT&T retains the right to throttle data speeds after 22GB of data usage, though the company claims slowdowns should occur only during periods of network congestion.
AT&T's new plan arrives just days after Verizon announced the resurrection of its own unlimited data tier. T-Mobile, which offers all-you-can-eat data under the One plan, responded to Verizon by activating HD video and adding a 10GB high-speed Mobile Hotspot feature at no extra charge.
With AT&T opening its unlimited tier to all comers, users in the market for uncapped data can now select a plan from all four major U.S. carriers. Those thinking about upgrading can check out AppleInsider's head-to-head comparison to see which offering best suits their needs.

Both consumers and business customers can take advantage of the new plan pricing, which includes unlimited talk, text and data on four lines for $180 a month. Business customers can get an even better deal with corporate discounts.
Prior to the change, users looking to sign up for unlimited data were required to also hold a DirecTV or U-Verse account.
AT&T confirmed details of the new unlimited tier to AppleInsider, saying single-line plans cost $100 with each additional line coming in at $40. Though a four-line example is being used to advertise the plan, customers can add additional unlimited users to their account as needed.
As noted in today's press release, the fourth line is essentially free via a monthly bill credit that starts after two billing cycles. Customers will have to pay $220 per month until the credit kicks in.
The usual trimmings are also included in the plan, allowing users to make unlimited calls from the U.S. to Canada and Mexico and send unlimited texts to over 120 countries. Customers who opt in to the free Roam North America feature can take advantage of unlimited talk, text and data in Canada and Mexico with no roaming charges.
"We're offering unlimited entertainment on the nation's best data network where and when you want to enjoy more of what you love," said David Christopher, Chief Marketing Officer of the AT&T Entertainment Group.
According to the fine print, AT&T retains the right to throttle data speeds after 22GB of data usage, though the company claims slowdowns should occur only during periods of network congestion.
AT&T's new plan arrives just days after Verizon announced the resurrection of its own unlimited data tier. T-Mobile, which offers all-you-can-eat data under the One plan, responded to Verizon by activating HD video and adding a 10GB high-speed Mobile Hotspot feature at no extra charge.
With AT&T opening its unlimited tier to all comers, users in the market for uncapped data can now select a plan from all four major U.S. carriers. Those thinking about upgrading can check out AppleInsider's head-to-head comparison to see which offering best suits their needs.
Comments
AT&T isn't really even trying.
How can ATT be $22 more expensive than T-mobile after giving a discount and while not offering hotspot and while a recent report shows that T-Mobile has a better network?
AT&T waits for a few days after these announcements and counters with a $100 plan? At this point who could possibly want to stay with AT&T???
Their network sucks compared to T-Mobile's. I constantly carry two phones, a personal iPhone on T-Mo and a work iPhone on AT&T. I do occasional speed tests on both and I'm amazed by how over the past year T-Mobile's coverage and speed have improved and AT&T hasn't. T-Mo has been catching up and its coverage map equals that of Verizon. Meanwhile, AT&T has been busy ripping people off with their overpriced plans.
The problem is they're not bothering keeping up with the Jones. I'm not even sure they're better than Sprint. What a poorly run company...
I hope they're saving their pennies for a huge 5G rollout, otherwise what they're doing makes no sense.
They are fortunate to have bought DirecTV otherwise their future would have looked bleak.
I hear it's absolutely great where they do, but please don't say they are equivalent to Verizon in coverage, because it is just not true. I live with it because I canned AT&T after being with them for a dozen years, and could never stomach the thought of Verizon.
T-mobile has a prepaid plan for $3/month for 30 minutes and $0.10/minute after that. You can use that to try T-mobile for a while.