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What Lincolnshire mobile users should know before choosing an EE bundle

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What Lincolnshire mobile users should know before choosing an EE bundle

People in Lincolnshire comparing mobile deals may wish to look closely at the small print before choosing an EE bundle, with claims in a national review suggesting that price, speeds and included extras can vary significantly between tariffs. The review presented EE as offering a mixed picture. It said some bundles include added benefits, but suggested the network may be less appealing to customers whose main priority is the lowest monthly price. The Lincoln Post has not independently verified these claims. One tariff highlighted in the review was said to cost £9 per month. That was reported to be more expensive than some entry-level offers from rival providers, although it was also described as including more data than certain cheaper alternatives. For households in Lincolnshire trying to manage monthly bills, that difference may matter when comparing overall value rather than headline cost alone. According to the claims, EE may be more attractive to customers who already use other services from the same provider. The review said EE One packages could include discounts on plans or access to unlimited mobile data, while some more expensive bundles were described as adding roaming and entertainment subscriptions. On that basis, the deals were presented as potentially better suited to people seeking several services in one contract rather than a straightforward mobile plan. The review also pointed to differences between tariffs that could affect everyday use across Lincoln and the wider county. Among the issues raised were speed caps on some lower-cost plans. Certain pay-as-you-go SIMs and cheaper monthly deals were reported to limit download speeds, meaning some customers could be using EE's network without getting its fastest available 5G performance. That may be of particular interest in Lincolnshire, where mobile coverage and network performance can vary between urban areas and more rural communities. Residents comparing offers may therefore wish to pay close attention to tariff terms, especially where speed, roaming and bundled extras are important considerations. On reliability, EE was reported to have performed relatively well in the survey cited by the review, with more than eight in ten customers said to be satisfied. That suggested the network was generally viewed as dependable, even if it did not lead the wider rankings mentioned in the same report. Customer service was described less positively. Satisfaction was said to be lower for support and for the help customers received. Roaming was also identified as a weaker area, with only selected tariffs reported to include it as standard. Customers on other plans may need to buy passes for travel abroad, which the survey reportedly found unpopular. For Lincolnshire consumers, the overall message from the claims is that headline price may not tell the full story. Data allowances, speed restrictions, roaming terms and extras included in a bundle could all affect whether a deal represents good value for an individual household. The Lincoln Post has not independently verified these claims.

Adapted by The Lincoln Post from www.telegraph.co.uk

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