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-   -   U.S. Cell phones that work in Europe (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/u-s-cell-phones-that-work-in-europe-515984/)

Robespierre Mar 26th, 2005 10:03 AM

U.S. Cell phones that work in Europe
 
This will be a comprehensive list of all the carriers and phones you can use both here and there without buying a SIM.

Please post only your <u>personal</u> experience here (no rumors, speculation, or discussion, please) and where you used the phone. Mention any plan you need to be on or action you have to take. I'll start:

AT&amp;T Wireless with Nationwide Roaming, $1/min, Siemens S46 - UK, North Sea Ferry

xyz123 Mar 26th, 2005 11:43 AM

Nokia 6610, SET300, T610...

T mobile US - UK, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Germany, Austria, Italy, Switzerland

Surfergirl Mar 26th, 2005 05:59 PM

T Mobile Samsung -- both the 715 and another without the camera. Used in England, Ireland, France, and Italy with great ease. World plan (free to sign up). 95 cents a minute; 35 cents text messages (a much better deal when trying to find someone in a big city -- I'm in front of the Trevi Fountain, see u in five).

jmw44 Mar 27th, 2005 05:01 AM

Pardon this very naive question, but Surfergirl, is it 95 cents no matter how far you are calling? (I told you it was going to be a naive one.)

Travelnut Mar 27th, 2005 05:19 AM

Sony Ericsson T300 (bought in 2003), used with T-Mobile. Incoming/outgoing calls $0.99/minute, good reception. Used in Holland, France, Germany, Switzerland so far. VERY EASY.

Surfergirl Mar 27th, 2005 05:49 AM

Yes, 95 cents, for example, calling from Italy to the U.S.; calling from Italy to Italy; and calling your family sitting next to you in the cafe on family time. That's why the text message option is better (cheaper). Not a stupid question. I had the same question before I used the phone overseas so I could figure 30 one minute phone calls would cost me about $30, whereas 90 text messages would cost about the same.

jmw44 Mar 28th, 2005 06:10 AM

Thanks very much. I've already copied your posts for future study.

barbyg Apr 9th, 2005 09:18 AM

Here's an even dumber question (yours were not, btw!), I'm planning on getting a nokia through T-mobile to use in Europe...but they said it would come &quot;locked&quot; for 6 months. Can I unlock it using an online pay service? Should I even attempt to do this? Or is it against their provider agreement? Would it be cheaper to switch sim cards according to the country I'm in? Help...lol this whole phone thing is driving me batty! :-)

Travelnut Apr 9th, 2005 09:24 AM

The whole point to switching SIM cards is b/c it will be cheaper. If you don't plan to talk a LOT, T-Mobile will do until you can get it unlocked ($0.99/minute is cheaper than other USA services).

xyz123 Apr 9th, 2005 10:15 AM

Nokia phones can easily be unlocked depending on how much you want to pay. Look at www.unlockme.co.uk..there is a forum where if you supply the imei # (on the box or there is a code that displays it as well as the carrier to which it is locked, they will provide the unlocking code for free. It is absolutely legal to unlock your phone, the phone is your property. It is the company that deliberately disables one of the benefits of gsm phones which is illegal in several countries such as Finland BTW. Or when you arrive in Europe you will find lots of store fronts quite willing to unlock the phone for not very much.....

Should not be a problem.

barbyg Apr 10th, 2005 07:51 AM

Thanks so much! I, too , am beginning to comprehend this! Cheers to all!


Clifton Apr 10th, 2005 08:04 AM


Add Hungary and Romania to the T-Mobile US Samsung tri-band list.


Patty Apr 10th, 2005 02:15 PM

Formerly ATT Wireless, now ATT/Cingular:

$1.29/min - Germany, Austria, UK, France
$1.69/min - Jamaica
$2.29/min - China
$3.49/min - Kenya (I actually used a local SIM here, but my roaming service did pick up both Kencell and Safaricom so I know it would have worked)

I used a Siemens S46 (GSM 900/1900) but the rates are the same regardless of the phone model.

You just need to contact customer service to activate international roaming. There's no activation or monthly fee.

You can also sign up for the optional discounted international roaming plan which I did for one trip. This brings the cost of calls in Western Europe down to $0.99/min with a monthly fee of $5.99. You can cancel the plan after you return and the fee is pro-rated. In my case I didn't end up paying the full $5.99 monthly fee.

brotherleelove2004 Apr 10th, 2005 02:28 PM

Does anyone know which if any phone will work in Greece this way?

jmw44 Apr 11th, 2005 05:20 AM

whoa, back up, folks. It's me again. What's this about the nokia being locked up for six months? I was planning on purchasing it with T-Mobile, and would not want it to be useless if by chance I'm able to go somewhere this summer. Help? Merci beaucoup. J.

Nikki Apr 11th, 2005 05:28 AM

brotherleelove2004, I used my Samsung phone with T-Mobile in Greece with no problems using the international roaming feature for 99 cents per minute.

Travelnut Apr 11th, 2005 05:30 AM

xyz123 commented on unlocking Nokia phones, about 6 posts up...

Sally Apr 11th, 2005 07:22 AM

ttt

barbyg Apr 13th, 2005 03:36 PM

When I called T-Mobil the other day about the details and a contract, they told me their phones would come locked up. When I mentioned that I had heard of sites where I could get the phone unlocked, the guy seemed interested.. I made up a site LOL...and said it was true that I could do this..I was just wondering about the legality of that, which was answered by a very nice reader here. I'm still in doubt as to which would be cheaper: T-Mobile with a contract for a year (free phone) or buying Mobalphone and paying per call billed to a credit card... Holy Moly!
De rien! et Bisous!

logos999 Apr 13th, 2005 04:03 PM

&gt; Or when you arrive in Europe you will find lots of store fronts quite willing to unlock the phone for not very much....

Just for Info. You will not find a store in Germany which is willing to unlock you phone. So it you arrive in Frankfurt or Munich be prepared. London seems to be no problem...

xyz123 Apr 14th, 2005 09:46 PM

Again to reiterate:

1. T mobile is the loosest US gsm carrier in terms of providing unlocking codes. I believe if you are a customer for 3 months and pay your bills they will provide the unlocking code for phones they sell you directly. Just make sure it is an international phone. The good thing about T mobile US international phones is they have both frequencies used in Europe 900 and 1800 as well as the US frequency they use 1900. Cingular gsm phones unless they are motorola quad bands, generally lack 900 as Cingular uses 850 in the US and hence has to provide phones with both 850 and 1900 leaving only one other frequency on its tri band models and that's 1800. Lots of discussion as to whether you absolutely have to have both 900 and 1800 (not absolutely but very helpful).

2. You can buy unlocked gsm phones with both 900 and 1800 at many web sites for about $80 for dual bands (a decent Nokia with 900 and 1800) and tri bands (generally 900,1800,1900) for starting at about $120 or $130 for a Nokia 3100 a cute little phone (no camera though).

3. Mobal phones, according to people who have recently bought them, arrive unlocked even though the web site claims the phones are locked. For what it's worth, Mobal uses O2 in the UK for its basic service and in essence they are providing an O2 service in the UK with free incoming in the UK. Their dual band phone runs $49 and the tri bands start at $99 which are good prices. Even if they arrive locked, they are Nokias and of all the models, Nokias are by far the easiest to unlock as the unlocking code calculator is freely available on the web. There are also sites that give out Nokia unlocking codes for free if you know the imei # (in effect the serial # of the phone) and the carrier to which it is locked.

Other manufacturers' unlocking codes are generally not available on the web and have to be unlocked physically using a cable something a little more difficult. As the previous poster points out and I have no reason to doubt her as I have not been to Germany recently, the availability of places that unlock phones varies by country. Certainly I know in London, if you walk up and down Oxford Street, you see store front after store front with large signs claiming they can unlock all phones for prices as low as &pound;8.

Is unlocking illegal? No it is most emphatically not, you own the phone. Is it a violatin of a contract you may have with a carrier? It depends on the way you may interpret your contract; nobody says anything specifically about unlocking phones. I would find it hard to believe that they can enforce anything if you enter a code into a phone you own to make the phone operate the way it was intended before they deliberately sabotaged it; there are also several enlightened countries such as Findland which prohibit the companies from disaboling this good feature of GSM phones but that's the way it is.

As far as service issues. T mobile and Cingular both allow international roaming throughout Western Europe. It is not so much that their coverage is excellent, what happens is you roam on a local network. For example, if you have activated international roaming on T mobile, when you arrive in the UK and turn on the phone, it will try to find internally a network it can register on i.e. a network that your provider (T mobile US) has a roaming arrangement with. Surprise, surprise, while in the UK generally the mobile network T mobile US phones register on is T Mobile UK (I wonder why) but you can manually choose a different network. Not that it matters as the way international roaming is set up, you pay the same asininely high rates for service (99 cents;minute US to both make and receive calls timed to the minute so a 61 second call costs $1.98!). The big issue is receiving. The advantage to you, however, is you retain your US mobile phone number so that somebody ringing your US mobile phone will hear a European ring tone (sometimes a problem as the ring tone is different since you are on a foreign network) but the calls go through pretty quickly amazingly enough and reception is usually excellent as European mobile phone coverage is generally superior to that in the US (generally is the key word there).

OTOH you can buy a local sim package which in the UK is very cheap with no hassles involved if you use Virgin Mobile. Lots of threads here about how simple it is...simply take your US sim card out of the phone and put in the local sim card...takes about 10 seconds. Voila, your mobile now registers on the local network and you now have a local phone number. Your friends have to be told the local phone number and have to dial internationally. They will pay sonmewhat more to call an international mobile but you pay nothing to receive calls and you also have the ability to call for very little within the country you are in.

Whether it is worth it or not is up to your own sense of how important it is to be reachable 24/7 and how much you wish to use the service. Certainly there are cheaper alternatives for calling and if you're onlyusing the mobile for emergencies, it might not pay.

Lots of threads, like I said, regarding this.

logos999 Apr 14th, 2005 11:21 PM

Facts or fiction... ;-)

sfowler Apr 15th, 2005 02:12 AM

I'm t-mobile -- I like having my own number when I am traveling.

I have used the phone is Western Europe, Former Yugoslavia, including Serbia and Southeat Asia [Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam]

The per minute charges range from $.99 to $2.99, but if you are using the phone only to stay in basic contact that's cool. It doesn't cost anyone from the US anything to call you because they are calling a US number.

barbyg Apr 16th, 2005 07:32 AM

XYZ! You are terrific! Thank you!

barb


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