Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking But with hundreds of plans from those telcos, it’s tricky to pick just one overall. That’s why we’ve used meaningful categories outside of our top pick—cheap, coverage, speed and data—to help guide your next telco provider if you’re in the market for someone new. The perks are what really help tip Woolworths Mobile over the edge for us. Outside of the main coverage perk and a decent amount of data across plans, Woolworths Mobile plans come with a 500GB data bank, data sharing with Woolworths Mobile customers, and up to $50 off a monthly Woolies groceries shop. While most plans are on the Telstra 4G network, Woolworths Mobile has started rolling out 5G plans. For alternatives, you’d have to jump around between providers. Either Telstra or Boost Mobile for coverage, Optus for perks and Vodafone for data-related benefits. Below is a daily updating list of some of the most popular SIM Only and Prepaid plans from Woolworths Mobile, Telstra, Boost Mobile, Optus and Vodafone. Sure, Moose’s plans are limited to SIM Only options, but 12 months of discounted pricing is great for a decent chunk of data on the Optus 4G network. Admittedly, the dollar-for-data value does drop after the first year, but Moose’s cheaper plans are regular winners and contenders for our cheaper category SIM Only monthly picks. For cheap SIM Only alternatives, consider plans from Circles.Life (particularly during specials and flash sales) or the regular six-month discounts from iiNet, Internode and Spintel. Below is a daily updating list of popular SIM Only plans from these providers. Additionally, Boost Mobile follows that somewhat frustrating trend of 28-day recharge cycles instead of 30 days or a month, so expect to pay extra for monthly prepaid recharges. Still, Boost tends to offer bonus data for the first three recharges, plus there are international call inclusions. For the best overall value, opt for a Boost Mobile 12-month long-expiry Prepaid plan. Outside of Telstra, it’s also worth considering plans on the Optus network, whose coverage reach is only a few fractions of a percent behind the Telstra wholesale network. In the same breath, Vodafone may have the smallest network in Australia, but it’s a great value choice where coverage is available for the vast majority of the population. Below is a daily updating list of popular Prepaid plans from our database with at least 10GB of data. That’s not the best, but if you pay for pricier plans, that jumps to a respectable 10Mbps. Even paying a few bucks more a month than the cheapest SIM Only plan means more than 100GB of data. From there, Vodafone’s data-cap leaps up in hundreds of gigabytes thanks to huge helpings of bonus data. And if you’re the kind of mobile user who wants no data cap, Vodafone offers an unlimited max-speed data plan. It’s also great that all Vodafone plans include access to the Vodafone 5G network. In terms of competition, Optus has a 500GB 5G plan, but that’s typically pricier than Vodafone’s unlimited data plan. Telstra, too, has introduced a 300GB plan but it’s comparatively pricy. Long-expiry plans from Kogan Mobile and Lebara Mobile offer plenty of data, while Felix Mobile’s only plan also offers unlimited data (albeit capped at 20Mbps). For comparison, check out this daily updating list of popular SIM Only and Prepaid plans from our database that have at least 100GB of data. While Telstra plans don’t tend to have the best dollar-for-data value, that lack of data-cap breathing space is curbed by no excess data charges. If you go over your SIM Only cap, speeds are slowed to 1.5Mbps for the rest of the billing cycle. Telstra recently rejigged its entry-level SIM Only plan to offer 5G support (albeit capped at 250Mbps speeds), plus you can share data across 10 eligible services. In terms of competition for speed, look at the Optus network and Optus MVNOs, followed by Vodafone and Vodafone MVNOs. The main disclaimer here is that you may live in an area that has better speeds from Vodafone than Optus (or, potentially, Telstra), depending on network coverage and mobile tower congestion. Below is a daily updating list of popular SIM Only plans on the Telstra network. For Prepaid fans who like to really double down on prepayment, Optus lets you roll over Prepaid days if you pay in advance (and it has a 200GB data bank). If you want to pay off a handset with a mobile plan, Vodafone and Optus are worth considering. For cheaper smartphones, have a look at Woolworths Mobile and Southern Phone, or check out Numobile and Boost Mobile for refurbished handsets. We champion coverage as the biggest consideration. If a mobile provider has a patchy signal in the areas you tend to frequent, they’re not going to be of much use to you. Similarly, while Telstra has the largest network and is therefore the safest coverage bet for most Australians, that’s not the case for all Australians. Use the interactive coverage map below for an idea of how coverage looks in your area. After coverage, data is usually the most important consideration. We treat 10GB as enough for everyday users and 30GB as sufficient for those with heavier data needs. Of course, if you’d burn through 30GB in a week, you’ll want to look at telcos that offer larger data caps. The final consideration should be the perks a telco offers, which can help separate contenders from the perfect plan for your needs. That said, it’s easier to cull the list of the dozens of telcos we track in our comparison engine when appraising them in terms of focused categories. The main and wholesale Telstra networks are objectively the largest, so they’re generally the best for coverage. The main Telstra network also tends to be the fastest. Cheaper telcos tend to operate on the still-wide-reaching Optus and Vodafone networks. If you want lots of data, look for a telco that offers 50GB or more. When different plans compete around the same data limits, we factor in cost and perks to determine overall value. For those with insatiable data needs, it’s best to opt for a telco with massive data caps or one with unlimited data (like Vodafone or Felix Mobile).

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