An Honest 2-Year Review of Mint Mobile

Josh Smith
6 min readMay 1, 2020

--

This article may contain referral and/or affiliate links.

2022 Update: We’ve been on the unlimited plan since July and we love it. Mint Mobile isn’t perfect, but it’s still unbeatable for the price – which for us, is free with our referral credits! Also, I’m excited to announce my new website, HustleSmartly, where I’ll share my experiences with various side hustles and share money-saving best practices – like using Mint Mobile. Sign up today to be the first to receive new content.

Short version: I was worried about paying for Mint Mobile a year at a time, which is how their pricing works; but Mint continued delivering great service well into my pre-paid year, and I’ve continued to renew several more times.

When you buy a year at a time, you get 3GB of 5G data for $15/month, but if you want to try it first there’s always a steal of a deal to try for 3 months.

Mint is a typical prepaid carrier in that the service is decent for the price, but will never be as fast as say, Verizon.

Mint Mobile also makes it really easy to get free wireless for an entire year with their easily attainable referral program (click here for details | click here for my separate review).

If you’re okay with all that, please click my referral link below to get started. At this moment Mint is running a BOGO 3 months plan — so you get 6 months for only $45!

If you’re still unsure, keep reading as I detail my experience below.

Try Mint Mobile for $15/month

I couldn’t justify a $495 payment on this when we found out we were pregnant. Hopefully it found a good home.

One of the first things on the chopping block when my wife and I discovered we’d be having a child (after my truck… RIP) was our wireless plans. We were paying around $200 monthly for our two smartphones and her mom’s parents’ flip phones. I used StraightTalk at $45/month, and the rest was my wife and her parents on T-Mobile.

$15/month wireless service at rock-bottom “bulk” pricing

So I began searching for the absolute lowest price on a cell phone plan. I found a few that were less than $25 monthly for one line, including Mint Mobile, Tello, and a couple others. But at the time, Mint was the lowest price I could find at $15 per month.

Here’s a quick spreadsheet comparison I made using each carrier’s lowest plan (5/1/2020). Note that there are now others with the same or cheaper pricing, but Mint Mobile has the most data in the $10–$15 price point.

We ported over to Mint in October 2017. I signed up for the introductory plan, which is a “bulk” purchase of three months at once, at $15 per month, for a total of $45 for each line. This gets you 3 GB of high-speed data with unlimited talk and text.

Introductory plan: $15/mo x 3 mo. = $45

Porting our phone numbers

The only issue I encountered is that I was unable to port my number from StraightTalk and I had to get a new one. Customer service, while very friendly (via chat), was unable to help. I was okay with this, though, because I’d been living in Arizona for two years with my old West Virginia area code (reppin’ the 304). My wife’s T-Mobile number ported without issue.

$15/month for wireless? Yes please

Network and service quality

Other than the issue with porting one of the numbers, everything was great. The service with Mint, which uses the T-Mobile network, was in my estimation the same or a little better than the average pre-paid carrier (I’ve used StraightTalk and Virgin) in terms of speed and reliability.

If you’ve never used a prepaid carrier, I’d describe it as driving a Chevy to work instead of a Lexus. They both do the job — one’s just “nicer.” Prepaid carriers are never the fastest and don’t always have coverage in more rural areas — but for me, the service is good enough in the Phoenix metro that I can use it during the day for traffic and occasional Instagram use and music streaming.

I expect my phone to work when I need it, and I’m forgiving if it’s slow on occasion or if there’s no service in some remote part of the country I happen to temporarily be in. Especially when I remember I’m only paying $15/month.

Data limits

If you’ve never gone without unlimited data, it’s not as bad as you think. Having limited data helps me to be more conscious of my smartphone use — I am more present around family and coworkers instead of having my face in my phone all the time. And when I do use my phone a lot — such as to download a podcast, or stream video or music — I do that on wifi at home or work. This way, all my data is saved for traffic monitoring or the occasional song stream or Instagram time.

If 3 GB/ month (the $15 option) sounds like too drastic a cut for you, Mint also has an 8 GB option at $20, and a 12 GB option at $25 — all still a great deal.

Renewal time

After my first 3 months, I was ready to renew. I’d had no problems to speak of with the network or service. But I was still afraid to commit to buying a whole year of wireless service at once (that’s how you get the $15/month price after the introductory offer).

What if they slow down my speeds after a month or two? What if they disappear from the face of the earth after they get this money from me? These are the questions I had at renewal time. I couldn’t quite pull the trigger.

So instead of renewing with the 1-year plan, I renewed at the 6-month plan. They’re a little higher — the 3GB plan comes out to $20/month instead of $15. I figured it would be worth it in case something went wrong.

But it didn’t.

Mint Mobile’s service and network continued to be great all the way through my 6-month renewal.

Taking the plunge: Paying for a year of wireless service at once

After the 6 months was up (I’d been with Mint for a total of 9 months now), I realized everything was still great. So I took the plunge and renewed both of our 3GB plans for a year, giving us back the $15/month price.

In July 2018, we spent $360 for 2 lines of service. For a whole year.

And we didn’t look back. Mint didn’t randomly disappear, they didn’t start throttling my data for no reason (only if I went over my 3GB), they didn’t slow the network down for no reason. It was fine. It worked just like it was supposed to. And it was so nice to not have a wireless bill to worry about for a whole year.

In fact, it went so well that the next July (2019), we renewed again. And in two months, we’ll renew again.

Screenshot from my account. Paying THIS amount once per year for wireless service? Nice!

The best part (besides the price)

Aside from the rock-bottom price of $15 per month for wireless service with Mint Mobile, the best thing about Mint is their sweet referral program.

Mint Mobile’s new referral program lets you get a FREE YEAR OF WIRELESS SERVICE when you refer five friends. And it’s not a shady “refer five friends, free year, but refer four friends, nothing” program. You get $25 for the first referral, $30 for the second, $35 for the third, and $40 for the fourth. Then $110 for the fifth- so all those referrals together equal a year of the 8GB plan, or a significant discount to the unlimited plan!

Easily attainable, right?

Summary / TL;DR

It’s a prepaid carrier, so it’s not the fastest and it doesn’t have coverage in the most places (it runs on T-Mobile’s network), but it’s a decently solid performer, especially among other prepaid carriers.

I experienced zero issues in my entire 2.5-year stay with Mint, including two separate one-year renewals, and I intend to renew for another year in July.

Mint has a sweet referral program where you get a free year of the 8GB plan if you refer five friends.

5/5 definitely recommend.

If you have any questions about Mint Mobile, I’ll do my best to answer them — ask away in the responses!

If you want to try out Mint Mobile’s unlimited data plan for $30/month, please use this link to help me work toward a free year (and then you can get started referring, too!):

https://mint-mobile.58dp.net/EKAAxn

--

--

Josh Smith

Follower of Christ; husband; father. Arizona, USA. Author of zero published books; just honest thoughts on Christianity and parenting. More: joshsmithaz.com