News

Vodafone Customers May Be Able to Break Contract Early

Vodafone Contract

Vodafone represents one of the UK’s largest mobile phone network providers. Providing phones and contracts, they have many, many, customers. There is, however, of course, a charge for the service they provide. Vodafone recently announced some changes to their billing. Increasing them, as if that was a surprise. As a result of this, however, OFCOM has ruled that Vodafone will have to allow thousands of their customers the opportunity to break their contract free of charge with no penalty.

In a report via the BBC,  in April 2017, Vodafone summarily decided to increase the ‘roaming charges’ specifically for usage outside of the EU. Customers were apparently informed of this with practically no notice and via text message. What this basically translated to was that the phone company has just significantly upped its non-EU prices at a whim.

OFCOM didn’t take too kindly to this and as such intervened. As a result of this intervention, Vodafone has been ordered to allow any of those who are significantly affected by this change, the opportunity to leave their contract with no penalty.

“Material Detriment”

Vodafone may have followed the rules of a price increase OFCOM, however, felt that it was communicated very poorly. In addition, the increase was going to unfairly affect those who would see a “material detriment” with the change.

As such, Vodafone has been told that, based on user figures and usage, at least 55,000 users may qualify to have their contract summarily cancelled with no penalty. How this will affect anyone on a phone/contract package is unclear, but to many, this may represent the opportunity to escape.

Just how bad was the increase though? Well, some customers had to pay £6 for roaming charges per day in the US, Canada and Russia. While you could possibly understand this charge in developing countries, those 3 hardly fall within that criteria.

The simplest way you can find out if you qualify is to speak to Vodafone. The bottom line is that you must simply prove a “material detriment” to yourself or your bill. At least unlike the FCC in America, OFCOM does seem to have the consumers interests at heart.

What do you think? A ridiculous charge? Reasonable based on international usage? Is Vodafone just being greedy? – Let us know in the comments!

 

 

Mike Sanders

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

AMD Releases New Adrenalin and AFMF 2 Drivers for Space Marine 2

AMD has released a significant update for gamers playing Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2, introducing…

3 hours ago

AMD Ryzen 5 7600X3D Outperforms Ryzen 7 9700X in Gaming

The AMD Ryzen 5 7600X3D is making waves in the gaming world, beating some of…

3 hours ago

Astro Bot Sells Out in Japan

PlayStation’s newest release, Astro Bot, has become a massive hit in Japan, where it has…

4 hours ago

Many Final Fantasy Games Rumored for Xbox Announcement at Tokyo Game Show

A major announcement may be on the horizon for Xbox gamers. According to Jez Corden…

5 hours ago

Baldur’s Gate 3 Modding Hits 1 Million Installs in 24 Hours After Mod Support Launch

Larian Studios has unleashed a new wave of creativity for Baldur's Gate 3 players with…

5 hours ago

Intel 24 Core i9 14900KS Raptor Lake Refresh CPU/Processor

Go beyond performance with the latest 14th Generation Intel Core processors, based on the Raptor-Lake…

11 hours ago