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Do you maintain a landline? Is there any good reason to?

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  • #16
    We do have a landline. Why?

    1. We're old-fashioned.
    2. It is cheap.
    3. It doesn't need to be recharged and works even when the power is out.
    4. Our alarm system is connected to it.
    5. We have unlimited calling time, unlike our cell phones which have a set number of minutes.
    6. I don't want to be reached 24/7. If I'm not home, leave a message. Don't call my cell. In fact, I don't generally give out my cell number. If I'm not home, I'm either working or otherwise occupied, not free to chat with you.
    7. Friends and family only need to know one phone number for all 3 of us, not 3 separate numbers.
    Steve

    * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
    * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
    * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

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    • #17
      No land line here, either. Since about 2004 or 2005 I think? My husband and I both have smartphones with unlimited data, unlimited texting, and so many minutes that they might as well be unlimited.

      No muss, no fuss, and it's easy to screen calls on a cell phone.

      And for those of you who are worried, I've maybe gotten two "junk" phone calls in the past 9 years?

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      • #18
        I haven't had a landline since I moved out of my parents house at 17. I move a lot and love that no matter where I go I a) have the same number and b) can be reached without friends and family having to call long distance.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by riverwed070707 View Post
          b) can be reached without friends and family having to call long distance.
          Any friends and family who call me from other places call with their cell so they don't pay long distance. I do the same. I never make long distance calls from the land line (even though it is only 3 cents/minute). I use the cell for those calls.
          Steve

          * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
          * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
          * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

          Comment


          • #20
            You know, this is a little family "spat" between my parents who are older.

            They have a little vacation trailer they use for maybe, at the most, 50 days/year. It's probably more like 30 days. They've had a landline there for years - it was my grandmothers.

            My father has suggested pulling the landline and just having a cellphone down there, for the little that it is used and save $25/month (there's no long distance on it).

            I honestly beleive my mother refuses to do so because she's "emotionally attached" to the phone number. Even dangling more cable shows (she loves her HGTV; they just have a basic package down there) doesn't seem to allow her to take the bait of removing the landline.

            I'll admit I have a little of my mother in me. I do still like a landline for my "long conversations" and then I get 300 minute plans from Virgin Mobile for quick conversations.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Scanner View Post
              I do still like a landline for my "long conversations" and then I get 300 minute plans from Virgin Mobile for quick conversations.
              I think the minutes is really what keeps us tied to the land line the most. On our cells, 5 of us share 850 minutes/month. We have only gone over that once but that's because we all have land lines (3 different households are on the plan together). If any one of us dropped our landlines, we'd blow through the 850 for sure. That said, perhaps if all 3 of us dropped our land lines, what we would save would make up for the extra money we'd have to spend to upgrade our cell plan.

              The problem is our alarm system uses the phone line, my mom's apartment buzzer uses her phone line and my cousin's front gate entry and alarm use his phone line so all 3 of us have some reason that we need a land line.
              Steve

              * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
              * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
              * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

              Comment


              • #22
                We still have our land line but only because we're not big cell phone people. We only have trac fones and only our kids and siblings have our numbers. If we're not at home leave a message at the beep. I find cell phones intrusive. Plus I really don't like having long conversations on them. For one I don't like the audio and for another the freaking thing gets hot and burns my ear.ha

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by Scanner View Post
                  You know, this is a little family "spat" between my parents who are older.

                  They have a little vacation trailer they use for maybe, at the most, 50 days/year. It's probably more like 30 days. They've had a landline there for years - it was my grandmothers.

                  My father has suggested pulling the landline and just having a cellphone down there, for the little that it is used and save $25/month (there's no long distance on it).

                  I honestly beleive my mother refuses to do so because she's "emotionally attached" to the phone number. Even dangling more cable shows (she loves her HGTV; they just have a basic package down there) doesn't seem to allow her to take the bait of removing the landline.

                  I'll admit I have a little of my mother in me. I do still like a landline for my "long conversations" and then I get 300 minute plans from Virgin Mobile for quick conversations.
                  See that's just it; it's an emotional thing. I hate that about myself because it's really irrational. I don't even like to talk on the phone that often. Cell or landline, I pretty much screen all of my calls except those from my mother. AND like Steve said, I like the idea of having one number that relatives can reach anyone in the family with which is ridiculous because my husband and daughter are tied to their cellphones and my son is more like me. I'm about to talk myself out of this thing because I could potentially save up to $720/year.

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by disneysteve View Post
                    The problem is our alarm system uses the phone line, my mom's apartment buzzer uses her phone line and my cousin's front gate entry and alarm use his phone line so all 3 of us have some reason that we need a land line.
                    This may actually be a non-issue. More and more these places are able to make those calls to a cell phone. Many of my friends in apartments now get those gate code calls to their cell (which wasn't an option in the past).

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                    • #25
                      My husband and I thought we could get away with skipping the landline and use our cell phones instead. But alas, we needed to have one installed (even a POTS -- plain old telephone service) in order to have a central security system running. Not having a landline would have cost us more money as we would have needed to install a transmitter in our attic. Now, we have one, cost us @ $40 a month.

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                      • #26
                        Ah, technlogy.

                        That which used to be wired (telephone) is now going wireless. ANd that which was wireless (TV) is now going wired.

                        And SavingAdvice can't keep up in the name of frugality and emotions.

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                        • #27
                          It's $10/month because not having it makes the package almost as expensive and having a landline is great in case the stupid cell phone is lost or misplaced or damaged.

                          We too have a 550 minutes cell phone family plan and that's because we try to use our home phone for calls to places. Most people who do the cell phone only and no land line use the unlimited minutes because they need to. Instead of $59.99/month they pay $119.99, but even the next step up at $79.99 gives you only 700 minutes and no way 150 extra minutes covers what I use my landline for. So $10 extra a month means cheaper cell phone plan instead of expensive plan.
                          LivingAlmostLarge Blog

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                          • #28
                            disregard -- sorry
                            Last edited by kork13; 09-20-2011, 06:38 AM. Reason: misread the previous post

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                            • #29
                              We only use cell phones. We also have a central security system AND no landline - they CAN do it if you ask!

                              As for costs of a landline, mine was $20 a month for super basic which I needed for the internet at my old apartment. If someone is paying (as the OP said) $85 a month, with $25 for internet, that means $60 for a landline!!! That's way too much....now you should be able to bundle the phone, cable, and internet for $85 or less...

                              For those of you who don't want to "give out the personal number" - google voice and other companies have "dummy" numbers for business use that you can program to go to vm, or ring different, or whatever you want...no need for two phones just for privacy!

                              Finally, you can add a cell phone to the "Do Not Call" list - that's not an excuse either.

                              If you want one because it's sentimental, fine, but otherwise no excuses.

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                              • #30
                                Nope taking off the home phone saves me $10. To add minutes onto a cell phone plan? Way more than $10. $20 buys me 150 extra anytime minutes for 2 people. No land line I know we'd burn through that. Assuming we get unlimited for 2 people for $119 that's $60/month extra to a cell phone. Does my home phone cost $60?Nope. It's cheaper to keep the home phone and not upgrade the cell phone plan.

                                If people have cell phone only plans, how many minutes do they use? Are they on the cheapest plan? Then they definitely save money or prepaid cell and no home phone saves even more money.

                                But if you have a cell phone without a home phone, what minutes and price plan do you use?
                                LivingAlmostLarge Blog

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