Cricket Supreme Unlimited
8.0

Cricket Supreme Unlimited

Best for users who want stronger everyday performance and more features than basic prepaid unlimited plans.
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Reliable unlimited data

Cricket Wireless Supreme Unlimited sits at the top of Cricket’s three-plan unlimited lineup (Select / Smart / Supreme) — and it’s a genuinely different category of product than its siblings. While Select and Smart are deprioritized unlimited plans with progressively more features, Supreme is the only Cricket plan with priority data, which means speeds stay fast during network congestion while other Cricket customers may slow down.

After evaluating Supreme Unlimited against the rest of Cricket’s lineup, competing premium prepaid plans on Verizon (Visible+ Pro) and T-Mobile (Mint Unlimited), and AT&T’s own postpaid flagship plans (Premium 2.0, Elite 2.0), here’s why it earned the highest score among Cricket plans — and where the alternatives still win.

At a Glance

NetworkAT&T (5G + 4G LTE; priority data)
Price (1 line standard)$60/mo (taxes included)
Price (1 line with AutoPay)$55/mo (taxes included; $5 credit starting month 2)
Price (4 lines)$130/mo total ($32.50/line)
High-speed dataUnlimited (priority data)
Hotspot50GB high-speed (throttled to 125 Kbps after)
Cloud storage150GB included
HBO MaxHBO Max with Ads included
International (MX/Canada)Full talk/text/data roaming included
International textingUnlimited to 200+ countries
5G accessYes (compatible device required)
ContractNone
Pricing modelAll-in (taxes/fees included)

What “Priority Data” Actually Means

This is the single most important detail in this review and the biggest differentiator versus Cricket’s other unlimited plans.

Cricket Select Unlimited and Smart Unlimited are deprioritized. During network congestion (stadiums, airports at peak hours, downtown cores at busy times), customers on these plans may experience slower speeds while higher-priority customers (AT&T postpaid, Cricket Supreme) maintain full speed.

Cricket Supreme Unlimited has priority data. Per Cricket’s network management documentation, Supreme customers — along with Cricket Sensible 10GB customers — receive priority data treatment. During the same congestion peaks, Supreme customers maintain full speed while Select/Smart customers may slow down.

Practical implications:

  • In dense urban areas during peak hours, Supreme customers see noticeably faster speeds than Smart or Select customers
  • At sports venues, concerts, and major events, Supreme is genuinely usable while Select may not be
  • For users who heavily depend on cellular data in congested locations, Supreme is the right Cricket pick

For Wi-Fi-first users who rarely encounter congestion, the priority data benefit is theoretical — Smart Unlimited delivers similar real-world performance at $10/month less. Priority data matters most for users who actually experience congestion regularly.

Pricing: Standard vs AutoPay

Cricket’s pricing structure is straightforward:

Standard rate: $60/month

Base price for new customers without AutoPay enrollment. Taxes and regulatory fees are included — the $60 you see is the $60 you pay. No surprise charges.

AutoPay rate: $55/month (effective)

Cricket offers a $5 AutoPay credit starting in your second month of service. The first month is at standard $60; from month 2 onward, you pay $55 effective. Over 12 months, AutoPay saves $55 annually.

Multi-line discounts:

Cricket’s family plan structure delivers strong per-line economics — particularly at 4 lines:

  • 1 line: $60/mo ($55 AutoPay)
  • 2 lines: ~$110 total ($55/line standard, $50/line AutoPay)
  • 3 lines: ~$135 total ($45/line)
  • 4 lines: $130 total ($32.50/line) — best value tier
  • 5 lines: ~$150 total ($30/line)

At 4 lines, Supreme Unlimited’s per-line cost ($32.50/line) is competitive with strong single-line MVNO plans — and meaningfully cheaper than postpaid flagships at similar feature levels (AT&T Premium 2.0 is $50/line at 4 lines, $200/month total). For multi-line families on AT&T’s network, Supreme delivers genuine flagship value at significantly less than postpaid pricing.

→ Verify multi-line pricing structure on cricketwireless.com.

Network and Coverage

Cricket Wireless is owned by AT&T and operates on AT&T’s nationwide 5G and 4G LTE network — the same towers as direct AT&T postpaid customers. Coverage is strong across most of the U.S., with AT&T historically holding particularly strong signal in Texas, the Southeast, and major metros nationwide.

5G access is included with all Cricket plans, but requires a compatible device. AT&T’s 5G+ networks are deployed in many urban and suburban markets, with continuing expansion.

Network priority is where Supreme genuinely differentiates from its Cricket siblings. Supreme’s priority data treatment means consistent speeds during congestion — closer to AT&T postpaid experience than typical MVNO performance.

For state-by-state AT&T coverage breakdowns, see our USA Coverage Guides.

What You Get

Every Cricket Wireless Supreme Unlimited plan includes:

  • Unlimited talk and text on AT&T’s network
  • Unlimited high-speed data with priority treatment during congestion
  • 50GB of high-speed mobile hotspot per line per month
  • HBO Max with Ads streaming subscription
  • 150GB of cloud storage
  • Full talk, text, and data roaming in Mexico and Canada
  • Unlimited international texting from the U.S. to 200+ countries
  • 5G access where available (compatible device required)
  • All-in pricing (taxes and regulatory fees included)
  • $5 AutoPay credit (starting month 2)
  • Multi-line discounts up to 5 lines (best value at 4 lines)
  • In-store retail support at thousands of Cricket Wireless locations
  • Cricket app for self-service account management
  • No contract or early termination fees

What You Don’t Get

Even at the top of Cricket’s lineup, Supreme has gaps versus AT&T postpaid flagships:

  • No 4K cellular streaming — Cricket plans typically deliver SD-quality video on cellular per AT&T’s video management policies (though Supreme’s bundled HBO Max may have different rules; verify)
  • Hotspot caps at 50GB — AT&T Elite 2.0 offers 250GB; Cricket Supreme is competitive but not best-in-class
  • No Latin America inclusion — AT&T Premium 2.0 includes 20 Latin American countries; Cricket Supreme is MX/Canada only
  • No 20GB international data — AT&T Elite 2.0 includes 20GB in 210+ destinations; Cricket Supreme requires Cricket Passport add-on
  • No dedicated AT&T retail support — Cricket retail is real but distinct from AT&T retail; Cricket customers don’t get AT&T Premium customer treatment
  • No AT&T Guarantee outage credits — Cricket doesn’t include AT&T’s automatic credits during qualifying network outages
  • No tablet/watch line discounts — Cricket offers $10/mo Smartwatch plan separately
  • No bundled Apple One, Disney+, Netflix, or other streaming — HBO Max is the only included streaming service

Real-World Performance

In daily use, Cricket Supreme Unlimited delivers performance closer to AT&T postpaid than typical MVNO experience — particularly because of the priority data structure. Here’s what to expect:

Calling and texting. Identical to direct AT&T postpaid — voice quality and text reliability unchanged.

Web browsing and social media. Smooth on standard 5G across all conditions. The priority data structure means fast speeds maintain even during peak congestion — meaningfully different from Cricket Select or Smart customers’ experience.

Navigation and rideshare. Maps load instantly. Real-time traffic and ETA calculations stay current even during peak congestion in major metros.

Streaming. HBO Max streams smoothly through the included subscription. Other video services typically deliver SD-quality on cellular per AT&T’s video management policies. Music streams at full quality.

Video calls. Zoom, FaceTime, and Google Meet maintain professional quality across all conditions thanks to priority data treatment. Quality holds during congestion peaks.

Heavy data usage. With priority data, Supreme customers don’t experience the deprioritization that hits Select and Smart customers. Use 50GB, 100GB, or more on cellular and speeds remain prioritized.

Hotspot tethering. The 50GB high-speed hotspot is among the strongest available on any prepaid plan — competitive with flagship postpaid plans (matches T-Mobile Beyond’s 50GB; less than AT&T Elite 2.0’s 250GB; less than Verizon Ultimate’s 60GB).

Mexico/Canada travel. Full talk/text/data inclusion in both countries works like domestic service — no per-day fees, no throttled speeds (subject to AT&T network management).

Hotspot and Power-User Features

The 50GB high-speed hotspot is genuinely competitive with flagship postpaid plans. What it can handle:

  • Full-time remote work over hotspot for the entire month
  • Multi-device tethering during business travel
  • HD video calls (Zoom, Teams, FaceTime, Google Meet) for full days
  • HD video streaming on tethered devices for several hours per day
  • Large file uploads and cloud sync
  • Backup home internet during outages
  • Multi-week travel scenarios with continuous tethering

What it can’t handle: extended 4K streaming over hotspot for many hours daily across all 30 days, or replacing fiber-class home internet permanently for a heavy-streaming household.

For users who genuinely need more than 50GB hotspot, AT&T Elite 2.0 at $115/mo offers 250GB — but at significantly higher cost without Cricket’s all-in pricing.

HBO Max with Ads is included free across all Supreme Unlimited subscriptions. This is a real benefit — a standalone HBO Max with Ads subscription costs around $9.99/month, so the bundle effectively saves $120/year for users who’d subscribe anyway.

150GB cloud storage is unique among Cricket competitors. Supreme is the only major prepaid unlimited plan we evaluate that includes substantial cloud storage as a built-in benefit.

International Coverage Detail

Supreme Unlimited’s international structure focuses on Mexico/Canada with broad messaging coverage:

Mexico and Canada (full inclusion):

  • Talk, text, and data work like domestic service
  • No per-day fees, no throttled speeds (subject to AT&T network management)
  • Roaming data may be reduced to 2G speeds in some scenarios

Beyond Mexico/Canada:

  • Unlimited texting to 200+ countries (from the U.S.)
  • International calling and data require Cricket Passport add-on (paid)

Compared to competitors:

  • AT&T Premium 2.0: Includes 20 Latin American countries free — broader than Cricket Supreme
  • T-Mobile Experience More: Includes free 5G in 215+ countries — broader still
  • Cricket Supreme: Best-in-class for users who specifically travel to MX/Canada and want all-in pricing

For users with heavy MX/Canada travel patterns, Supreme is among the strongest options — and dramatically cheaper than postpaid alternatives. For users with broader international travel, T-Mobile postpaid plans or AT&T Elite 2.0 are better fits.

Customer Experience

Cricket offers comprehensive customer support for an MVNO:

  • In-store retail support at thousands of Cricket Wireless locations nationwide
  • Phone support with traditional 1-800 customer service
  • Cricket app for self-service account management
  • Online chat through cricketwireless.com
  • AT&T ownership benefit — Cricket has the financial backing of AT&T’s parent company

The retail infrastructure is genuinely meaningful versus pure-digital MVNOs (Visible, Mint Mobile, US Mobile). Cricket has consistently scored above MVNO average in customer satisfaction surveys, partly due to the in-store option.

What works well:

  • Walk-in support at Cricket retail stores nationwide
  • Cricket app well-designed for self-service
  • All-in pricing with no surprise taxes/fees
  • Cricket Passport international add-on for travelers (separate from included MX/Canada)

Where it falls short:

  • Phone support hours and quality vary by region
  • AT&T network outages affect Cricket service identically (no AT&T Guarantee credits)
  • Some advanced features (eSIM transfers, complex porting) may have more friction than direct postpaid
  • No direct line to AT&T Premium customer service

How Cricket Supreme Unlimited Compares

Supreme Unlimited has natural alternatives within Cricket and across competing flagship prepaid and postpaid plans. Here’s how the comparison shakes out.

Cricket Supreme vs. Cricket Smart Unlimited

FeatureSupreme UnlimitedSmart Unlimited
Price standard$60/mo$50/mo
Price with AutoPay$55/mo$45/mo
Priority dataYesNo (deprioritized)
Hotspot50GB15GB
HBO Max with AdsIncludedNot included
Cloud storage150GB100GB
Mexico/CanadaFull data roamingFull data roaming

For just $10/month more (or $5 with AutoPay), Supreme delivers priority data (the only Cricket plan with it), 35GB more hotspot, HBO Max with Ads bundled, and 50GB more cloud storage. This is one of the strongest upgrade value propositions in Cricket’s lineup. For users who want premium prepaid experience and HBO Max bundled, Supreme is genuinely worth the $10/month premium.

Read our full Cricket Smart Unlimited review for the mid-tier comparison.

Cricket Supreme vs. AT&T Premium 2.0

FeatureCricket Supreme UnlimitedAT&T Premium 2.0
Price (1 line)$60/mo all-in ($55 AutoPay)$90/mo + taxes (~$100 effective)
Price (4 lines)$130/mo total ($32.50/line)$200/mo total ($50/line)
NetworkAT&T (Cricket — MVNO)AT&T postpaid direct
Priority dataYesYes (truly unlimited)
Hotspot50GB100GB
Cellular streamingSD per AT&T policies4K UHD
InternationalMX/Canada full20 Latin American countries
Streaming bundleHBO Max with AdsNone included automatically
In-store supportCricket retailAT&T retail (more locations, more services)
AT&T GuaranteeNoYes (automatic outage credits)

Both run on AT&T’s network with priority data. AT&T Premium 2.0 wins on hotspot (100GB vs 50GB), 4K cellular streaming, broader international (Latin America inclusion), and AT&T-direct retail support. Cricket Supreme wins on price — at single-line ($55 vs ~$100 effective), Supreme saves $45/month with the HBO Max bundle. At 4 lines, the savings compound: $130 vs $200 = $70/month saved while retaining priority data and 50GB hotspot.

For users who don’t specifically need 100GB hotspot or 4K cellular streaming, Cricket Supreme delivers most of Premium 2.0’s benefits at half the cost. For users who need the additional features, Premium 2.0’s premium is justified.

Read our full AT&T Premium 2.0 review for the postpaid comparison.

Cricket Supreme vs. Visible+ Pro

FeatureCricket SupremeVisible+ Pro
Standard price$60/mo all-in ($55 AutoPay)$45/mo all-in
First-year promo$26/mo (with SWITCH26)
NetworkAT&T (priority data)Verizon only
High-speed dataUnlimited (priority)Priority on LTE/5G + unlimited UWB
Hotspot50GBUnlimited at 15 Mbps
Streaming bundleHBO Max with AdsLimited
Apple Watch$10/mo add-onIncluded free
In-store supportCricket retailDigital-only

For users without specific need for AT&T’s network or in-store support, Visible+ Pro at $45 standard ($26 promo) on Verizon’s network delivers similar core service for less money. Visible+ Pro wins on hotspot (unlimited vs 50GB) and Apple Watch inclusion. Cricket Supreme wins on AT&T network access, HBO Max with Ads bundling, and priority data structure.

Read our full Visible+ Pro plan review for the cross-network alternative.

Cricket Supreme vs. T-Mobile Experience More

FeatureCricket SupremeT-Mobile Experience More
Price (1 line)$60/mo all-in ($55 AutoPay)$90/mo + taxes (~$100 effective)
NetworkAT&T (priority data)T-Mobile postpaid
High-speed dataUnlimited (priority)100GB priority
Hotspot50GB30GB
Streaming bundleHBO Max with AdsApple TV+ + Hulu
InternationalMX/Canada fullFree 5G in 215+ countries
In-store supportCricket retailT-Mobile retail

T-Mobile Experience More on T-Mobile’s network costs roughly twice as much effective as Cricket Supreme. Cricket Supreme wins on hotspot (50GB vs 30GB), priority data structure (truly unlimited vs 100GB cap), and value (~$45-50/month savings). T-Mobile More wins on broader international (215+ countries) and bundled Apple TV+ + Hulu vs HBO Max with Ads alone.

Read our full T-Mobile Experience More review for the postpaid comparison.

For more comparisons, see our Best Unlimited Data Plans and Best Prepaid Phone Plans.

Who Should Choose Cricket Supreme Unlimited

Power users on AT&T’s network who want priority data without postpaid pricing. Cricket Supreme is the only Cricket plan with priority data — meaningful for users who experience network congestion regularly.

Hotspot-dependent professionals (under 50GB monthly). The 50GB high-speed hotspot is competitive with flagship postpaid plans and substantially better than typical prepaid offerings.

Multi-line families wanting AT&T flagship economics. At $32.50/line for 4 lines ($130/mo total all-in), Supreme delivers per-line costs competitive with cheaper single-line plans while retaining flagship features.

HBO Max users. A standalone HBO Max with Ads subscription costs around $9.99/month. Supreme’s bundled HBO Max effectively saves $120/year for users who’d subscribe anyway.

Frequent Mexico/Canada visitors. Full talk/text/data inclusion in both countries — works like domestic service.

Users wanting 150GB cloud storage. Unique among major prepaid unlimited plans — useful for users who want photo backup, document storage, and similar without separate paid services.

Users wanting all-in pricing transparency. $60 standard ($55 AutoPay) is genuinely $60/$55 — no surprise taxes or fees.

Users who want Cricket retail support. Walk-in support at thousands of Cricket retail locations is a meaningful benefit versus pure-digital MVNOs.

See Cricket Supreme Unlimited →

Who Should Skip Cricket Supreme Unlimited

Light data users. If you stay under 15GB monthly and don’t need HBO Max or 50GB hotspot, Cricket Smart Unlimited at $10/month less saves money while delivering similar core service (with the trade-off of deprioritized data).

Heavy tetherers (50GB+ monthly). AT&T Elite 2.0 at $115/mo offers 250GB hotspot — the only flagship that fits sustained heavy tetherers. The premium versus Cricket Supreme is real but justified for genuine heavy users.

Users wanting 4K cellular streaming. Cricket plans typically deliver SD video on cellular per AT&T’s video management policies. For 4K cellular streaming, AT&T Premium 2.0 or Verizon Ultimate is required.

Frequent international travelers beyond Mexico/Canada. Supreme’s international inclusion is MX/Canada only. For broader international, AT&T Elite 2.0 (20GB in 210+ countries), T-Mobile Experience More (free 5G in 215+ countries), or US Mobile Premium offer better international structures.

Users wanting AT&T-direct retail support. Cricket retail is real but distinct from AT&T retail. For AT&T’s full retail infrastructure, AT&T Guarantee outage credits, and AT&T-direct customer service, AT&T Premium 2.0 at higher cost is the upgrade path.

Users who don’t watch HBO Max. The HBO Max bundle is real value for users who’d subscribe anyway. For users who don’t watch HBO Max, that “saves $120/year” math becomes irrelevant — and Smart Unlimited at $10/month less may be the better pick.

Users on T-Mobile or Verizon coverage. Visible+ Pro on Verizon, Mint Mobile Unlimited on T-Mobile, or US Mobile Unlimited Premium with multi-network choice may be better fits depending on which network is strongest in your area.

Users uncomfortable with prepaid retail experience. Cricket retail varies in quality versus AT&T direct retail. Users who want the most polished customer experience may prefer AT&T postpaid despite the price premium.

How to Switch to Cricket Supreme Unlimited

The switching process is fast and can happen online or in-store:

  1. Verify AT&T coverage at your home, work, and frequent travel destinations using AT&T’s coverage map. Cricket coverage mirrors AT&T directly.
  2. Check phone compatibility. Most modern unlocked phones work; Cricket’s website includes a compatibility checker. eSIM-capable phones activate fastest.
  3. Get your account info from your current carrier — account number and Number Transfer PIN.
  4. Decide on lines. Multi-line economics get dramatically better at 4 lines ($32.50/line vs $55 single-line with AutoPay). If you have family on the plan, run the math.
  5. Sign up via cricketwireless.com or in-store. In-store activation may include device promotions and immediate eSIM activation.
  6. Enroll in AutoPay for the $5 monthly credit starting month 2.
  7. Activate your service. eSIM activation is instant on supported phones; physical SIM ships in 1-3 business days.
  8. Set up HBO Max through Cricket’s account portal once active.
  9. Configure cloud storage — 150GB is included; activate it through Cricket’s app or web portal.

Don’t cancel your old service before the port completes — Cricket handles cancellation automatically once your number transfers.

Final Verdict

Cricket Supreme Unlimited earns 8.0/10 in our cross-carrier rankings — Cricket’s highest-scored plan and the #12 plan overall among 45 we evaluate.

The combination of priority data on AT&T’s network, 50GB high-speed hotspot, HBO Max with Ads, 150GB cloud storage, and all-in pricing at $55/month with AutoPay delivers genuine flagship-class wireless service at significantly less than postpaid pricing. For users who want flagship features without paying flagship-postpaid prices, Cricket Supreme is meaningfully competitive.

For users who don’t need premium features, Cricket Smart Unlimited at $10/month less ($45 with AutoPay) saves money — particularly for users who stay under 15GB monthly and don’t watch HBO Max.

For users who need maximum hotspot or 4K cellular streaming, AT&T Premium 2.0 or AT&T Elite 2.0 at significantly higher cost deliver the additional features. The premium is real but justified for users who’d actually use the differences.

For users on Verizon’s network, Visible+ Pro at $45 standard ($26 promo) is the strong cross-network alternative — with unlimited hotspot and Apple Watch included.

For users wanting maximum value across all four scoring pillars, US Mobile Unlimited Premium at $32.50 all-in delivers our #1-ranked plan with multi-network choice, unlimited hotspot, and 20GB international data.

The honest takeaway: Cricket Supreme is genuinely Cricket’s best plan and competitive at the prepaid flagship tier. The HBO Max bundle, priority data, and 50GB hotspot are real differentiators. For multi-line families on AT&T’s network, the per-line economics ($32.50/line at 4 lines) are exceptional — meaningful savings versus AT&T postpaid while retaining priority data and most flagship features.

Get Cricket Supreme Unlimited →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Cricket Supreme Unlimited worth it? Yes — for users who want flagship-class service on AT&T’s network without postpaid pricing. It earns 8.0/10 in our rankings and is Cricket’s highest-scored plan. The combination of priority data, 50GB hotspot, HBO Max with Ads, and 150GB cloud storage at $55/month with AutoPay is genuinely competitive. For light users who don’t need premium features, Cricket Smart Unlimited at $10/month less is the smarter pick.

What’s the actual price of Cricket Supreme Unlimited? $60/month standard or $55/month with AutoPay (taxes and fees included). The $5 AutoPay credit starts in month 2. Multi-line pricing improves significantly: 4 lines costs $130/month total ($32.50/line). All pricing is all-in with no surprise charges. Cricket also offers Multi-Month plans (3-month or 12-month prepay) with different pricing structures — verify on cricketwireless.com.

Does Supreme Unlimited include priority data? Yes — and it’s the only Cricket plan that does. Per Cricket’s network management policy, Supreme customers receive priority data treatment, meaning speeds stay fast even during network congestion when other Cricket customers (Select, Smart) may slow down. This is meaningful in dense urban areas during peak hours, at sports venues, and at major events.

Is hotspot included on Cricket Supreme? Yes. Supreme includes 50GB of high-speed mobile hotspot data per line per month. After 50GB, hotspot speeds drop to 125 Kbps for the rest of the billing cycle. The 50GB allotment is competitive with flagship postpaid plans — matches T-Mobile Experience Beyond (50GB) and exceeds Verizon Unlimited Plus (30GB), though less than AT&T Elite 2.0’s 250GB.

Does Supreme Unlimited include HBO Max? Yes — HBO Max with Ads is included as a permanent benefit (not a promotional add-on). This is a real benefit: a standalone HBO Max with Ads subscription costs around $9.99/month, so the bundle effectively saves $120/year for users who’d subscribe anyway. To activate, use Cricket’s account portal once your service is active.

Does Supreme work in Mexico and Canada? Yes, fully. Supreme includes unlimited talk, text, and data roaming in both Mexico and Canada — works like domestic service. Data roaming may be reduced to 2G speeds in some scenarios. For users with regular MX/Canada travel, Supreme is among the strongest prepaid options. For broader international travel beyond MX/Canada, T-Mobile Experience plans or AT&T Elite 2.0 offer better structures.

What’s the difference between Supreme and Smart Unlimited? Supreme ($55 AutoPay) adds priority data, 35GB more hotspot (50GB vs 15GB), HBO Max with Ads, and 50GB more cloud storage (150GB vs 100GB) versus Smart Unlimited ($45 AutoPay). The $10/month upgrade is genuinely worth it for users who experience network congestion, watch HBO Max, or tether more than 15GB monthly. For light users, Smart’s $10/month savings make sense.

Can I bring my own phone to Cricket Supreme? Yes. Cricket is a Bring-Your-Own-Device carrier on AT&T’s network. Most modern unlocked phones (iPhones XS and newer, recent Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices) work without issue. Use Cricket’s free compatibility checker on cricketwireless.com to confirm your specific device. eSIM-capable phones activate fastest. If your phone is locked to a previous carrier, request an unlock first.

Carrier offerings change frequently. Pricing, plan terms, network performance, and promotional offers verified at publication but may differ at time of reading. Always confirm on the carrier’s official website before signing up.

Methodology: We evaluate every carrier on network reliability, real-world data performance, hotspot usability, and long-term pricing transparency. See our full methodology →.

$60/mo
$55/mo with AutoPay (taxes included)
4 lines: $130/mo ($32.50/line)

See Plan Details

Reliable unlimited data

7.5
Value for Money
8.5
Network Reliability & Speed
9.0
Hotspot & Features
7.0
Customer Experience
8.0 Overall Rating

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