Sprint is Now the Only 'Unlimited' 4G Carrier

T-Mobile's caps are significantly different from AT&T's and Verizon's, however, in that they don't charge overage fees to users who exceed their monthly caps. Instead, T-Mobile will knock down users who go over the cap to its 2G EDGE network, thus effectively limiting the amount of data they can consume on their HSPA+ network and slowing down their connection speed.
BACKGROUND: Bandwidth caps coming to AT&T wireline services
The T-Mobile caps also offer more bang for the buck than the plans offered by Verizon and AT&T. The carrier is offering four different monthly data plans: a 200MB plan for $10 a month; a 2GB plan for $20 a month; a 5GB plan for $30 a month; and a 10GB plan for $60 per month. AT&T, by contrast, charges iPad users $15 a month for 250MB of data and $25 a month for 2GB of data. Verizon, meanwhile, offers a 1GB plan for $20, a 3GB plan for $35, a 5GB plan for $50 and a 10GB plan for $80.

The wireless industry has been moving away from all-you-can-eat data plans and toward tiered service plans for the past couple of years. AT&T got the ball rolling on wireless data caps last year when it announced it was dropping unlimited data plans for the iPhone in favor of plans that offered between 200MB and 2GB of data consumption per month. Verizon shortly followed suit by saying it would implement a similar pricing scheme for its 4G LTE services that launched commercially in December.
AT&T has also said that it will start imposing data caps on its wireline services by slapping its DSL customers with a 150GB cap and its U-Verse customers with a 250GB cap. AT&T says that it will only charge for overages if wireline users exceed their monthly caps three times or more, however.
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