![]() ![]() ![]() But if you need truly unlimited data or the very fastest data speeds, then you might want to look elsewhere. In short: Mint’s plans are an awesome deal if all you need is 4–35 GB of high-speed data, and you don’t mind the risk of occasional data slowdowns due to deprioritization. This means that customers are always at risk of having their data slowed down when the network is busy even before reaching their data cap. One more thing to note about Mint’s plans is that they are all subject to data deprioritization. Mind you this is on a brand new 5G capable phone. I would barely get 20Mbps down and 2Mbps up if I'm lucky to get a signal. There's heavy deprioritization happening. Even though it uses T-Mobile network, speed and coverage is much worse than T-Mobile. While 35 GB is a lot of data, it’s hardly unlimited. Mint mobile is cheap, and that's about the best feature it has. It’s more like a 35 GB plan because after you use that much data your speeds will go way down. So what about Mint’s “unlimited” data option? Well, we put the word unlimited in scare quotes for a reason. ![]() After you reach your data limit, your speeds will be reduced to 128 Kbps, which is very slow (you won’t be able to stream video or audio reliably with those speeds). With the three limited data options, you’ll get 4 GB, 10 GB, or 15 GB of 4G LTE data. ![]()
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