SilentCallsVictim wrote on Apr 8
th, 2008 at 4:01pm:
Outside of Kingston upon Hull, does anybody know where in the UK telephone charges vary?
So far as I am aware the numerous UK telecoms operators mainly all charge the same call prices for calls to all parts of the UK even though each provider has their own varying car tariffs. However the BT Light User Scheme and In Contact Plus charge artificially inflated prices for calls to 01/02 and 03 numbers for longer distance calls (over 56km) which they then discount back to a lower rate for calls to 0845 numbers. Of course no one who makes any number of calls per quarter is on these plans, especially given that most outrageously of all you cannot have one of these plans if you also have broadband on the phone line.
The key point which the 084 NTS charlatans cannot avoid is that 01/02/03 numbers qualify for unlimited free calls (up to 60 minutes) with numerous major telecoms provides including BT on numerous popular tariffs and the same is true that they qualify for free bundled minutes with all contract mobile phone operators. Whereas 084/7 numbers are always excluded from such plans because they are far more expensive to the phone companies at a wholesale level and so they cannot possibly afford to inlclude them in their unlimited calls or bundled minutes calling plans.
As a vast percentage of UK phone customers (especially elderly and disabled people based at home and thus making lots of phone calls from home) now have unlimited call plans it is self evident that calling an 0844 number costs most of these people 5p per minute +6p connection compared to nothing per minute if the number began 01 and 02.
The comparison of 0844 against BT Option 1 is a red herring. The comparison must be done against call plans that provide unlimited 01/02/03 calls from landlines or a set number of minutes to 01/02/03 from mobiles in order to give the true picture of the real cost of 0870.
Vodafone recently texted me to tell me that they are increasing the minimum call charge on my Pay As You Go tariff to 15p from 10p on June 1st (before that there was no minimum charge 18 months or so ago) but that is the last reminder I will ever get of that fact because as a Pay As You Go mobile phone customer Ofcom allows a regime to exist where I am not entitled to any access to itemised call charges, even online where there would be almost no marginal cost to Vodafone in providing the service.