
College-bound? Get unlimited data for $25 a month with Metro by T-Mobile's BYOD offer 📲
Metro by T-Mobile is a reliable phone service provider known for consistently rolling out enticing new offers and promotions, like Metro's 5-Year Price Guarantee, that helps keep our readers on-budget and connected!
One of the sweetest offers right now is Metro's Bring Your Own Device plan (BYOD) for just $25 per month (fees and taxes included)—and that price is guaranteed for five years! There's truly no better time than now to make the switch and start saving on your monthly expenses.
Check out more details about this Metro by T-Mobile offer below:
Switch to Metro by T-Mobile
When you decide to make the best money-saving switch to Metro, new customers can bring their own phone and pay just $25 per month (taxes and fees are included) when you sign up for Autopay. This BYOD plan will offer you:
There are many great benefits to making the switch to Metro using their Bring Your Own Device offer, but our favorite is definitely the money-saving aspect. What's even better is that beyond the affordability, Metro by T-Mobile also offers these surprising additional perks:
Most unlocked GSM phones are compatible with Metro by T-Mobile, which operates on the robust T-Mobile network. To quickly confirm your phone's compatibility, simply visit the Metro by T-Mobile website and enter its IMEI number.
Keep in mind that for successful activation on Metro's network, your phone must be unlocked. If you still owe a balance on your device with your previous provider, they may charge you for that outstanding amount before unlocking it.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Geek Wire
a day ago
- Geek Wire
New filing: T-Mobile lays off 121 employees in Washington
(Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash) T-Mobile laid off 121 workers in Washington state, according to a filing with the Washington state Employment Security Department posted on Friday. GeekWire previously reported on T-Mobile's layoffs earlier this week. The Bellevue, Wash.-based wireless carrier did not provide details about number of workers impacted but said the cuts affected employees within its IT organization. T-Mobile employed about 70,000 people as of Dec. 31, 2024. The company has nearly 8,000 employees in the Seattle region, according to LinkedIn. T-Mobile, which recently closed its acquisition of UScellular's wireless operations, reported $17.4 billion in services revenue for its most recent quarter, up 6% year-over-year, and net income of $3.2 billion — up 10% and a quarterly record. Its stock is up more than 30% in the past 12 months. Oracle and F5 also recently laid off workers in the Seattle area.


Business Wire
a day ago
- Business Wire
Global Telecom's TITAN 5G Devices Join T-Mobile's T-Priority Program — A New Standard for Fixed Wireless Access
IRVINE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Global Telecom Engineering, a leader in IoT and fixed wireless innovation, proudly announces that its TITAN 5000, TITAN 5100, and TITAN 5400 5G FWA (Fixed Wireless Access) devices are now part of T-Mobile's T-Priority Program. This milestone collaboration enables both companies to advance reliable, high-performance broadband for critical sectors including public safety, utilities, medical services, and rural infrastructure across the U.S. TITAN Family Overview Designed to perform up to 10 miles from the Radio Access Network (RAN), the TITAN series lowers infrastructure costs while delivering powerful 5G connectivity. Key innovations include: Intent-Based Network Optimization – patented dynamic technology that adapts to maintain optimal connection quality and network efficiency. High-Gain Antennas – providing robust signal strength, even in remote or challenging environments. Starlink Compatibility – all models connect instantly without hardware or software changes. Model Highlights TITAN 5000 – Indoor enterprise grade seamless integration with existing infrastructure; ideal for managed deployments. TITAN 5100 – Self-installable, IP67-rated for outdoor/indoor use, weather-resistant with flexible mounting options. TITAN 5400 – Directional high-gain antenna for long-range rural coverage and critical infrastructure deployment. Key Features & Benefits High-speed 5G performance up to 10 miles from RAN Desktop pricing with enterprise-grade performance Remote management and configuration Zero-touch deployment & AP support Enhanced spectrum efficiency and easy deployment 'Incorporating our TITANs into T-Mobile's T-Priority underscores our commitment to delivering reliable, high-quality 5G solutions,' said Christy Wheat, VP of Operations at Global Telecom Engineering. 'This partnership marks a significant step forward in meeting the connectivity needs of modern infrastructure with unmatched performance and affordability.' About Global Telecom Engineering Global Telecom Engineering delivers cutting-edge 5G and IoT connectivity solutions. Renowned for innovation and reliability, Global Telecom empowers networks to be more efficient, scalable, and resilient.


Android Authority
a day ago
- Android Authority
I'd pay for a decoy PIN and profile on my Android phone, and I'm not alone
Rita El Khoury / Android Authority A few days ago, my colleague Calvin shared an interesting fact about GrapheneOS: The custom ROM allows him to set a duress PIN that completely erases the phone when he enters it, including encryption keys and the eSIM partition. It's a very drastic privacy measure that lets anyone protect their data if they're being forced to hand over or unlock their phone when they don't want to do it. I love that the feature exists for those who think they might need it, even if it's through a custom ROM, but as many commenters pointed out on Calvin's article, this is too drastic for most of us. Instead, what several commenters and I would like is more akin to a decoy PIN that opens a sandboxed version of my profile. And I'm not alone. Several of you want exactly that and would even pay for it. Rita El Khoury / Android Authority Another option would be to make multiple users on Android accessible from the same PIN unlock screen, and we'd be golden. I'm surprised this feature isn't yet a part of Android, especially when it could benefit everyone, not just privacy freaks, including families that share a tablet at home. Do you want a duress or decoy PIN on Android? 0 votes Duress. Let me erase my entire phone with 4 digits! NaN % Decoy. Switching to a harmless profile is good enough for me. NaN % Why not both? Let me pick. NaN % I don't see a need for either of these. NaN % A duress PIN is too much; a decoy PIN is a simpler solution Rita El Khoury / Android Authority Even though I'm fascinated by the idea of setting up a kill switch on my phone, I think it's an extreme measure that very few, if any, people will ever need or use. It's an overkill solution that leaves room for potential forgetfulness and misuse. If you choose a strong PIN, you might forget about it the very moment you need it. If you choose a weak PIN, like 0000 or 1234, you'll risk someone (a kid, most likely) wiping your phone and data by mistake if they pick up your phone and try to guess your code. Someone suggested choosing a decoy PIN that differs by one number from their primary PIN, but I think that's even worse. One finger slip and my data is poof, gone. Better never use my phone with oily or sweaty fingers! What also worries me about duress PINs is that they might trigger violence on the side of the person forcing me to unlock my phone. Who knows what they might do when they realize I erased everything? Erasing the entire phone under duress sounds like a perfect solution, but it's too nuclear and might cause problems. A decoy PIN and profile make more sense to me. A decoy PIN would behave a bit differently. Instead of erasing my phone, it would either unlock a sandboxed version of my profile with all crucial apps (banking, files, photos) hidden, or it would unlock under a different user and keep my primary account and data hidden and encrypted. For the former, Google would need to figure out how to privately and effectively sandbox parts of the OS, which may not be the easiest option. For the latter, it would be on the (very invested and tech literate) user to choose whether they want to do the work to create a separate profile and believable account. Personally, I imagine setting this up with a relatively unused Google account, and keeping a few apps and bits of data there with no real value. If I'm ever forced to unlock my phone, I could enter this decoy PIN, open a decoy profile, and let them explore that. No reason for them to suspect that I'm hiding something or that I've erased data and evidence. Look, I know that, technically, in the case of police investigations or targeted assault from violent criminals, no duress PIN or decoy PIN can guarantee that you'll come out unscathed or that your data won't be obtained in some other manner. But most of us are normal people who live boring old lives. There's no logical reason we should be afraid of these situations. What worries me, personally, is more on the scale of petty modern thieves who might demand access to my financial apps. And in those cases, keeping the banking and money apps away under a main profile while the decoy profile houses nothing of the sort seems like a good level of protection to me, without going too far in the cloak-and-dagger mentality. I liken it a bit to using a duress code on my alarm system. Instead of triggering the sirens around the house, entering this secondary code disarms the system but sends a silent notification to my emergency contacts saying that I was forced to disarm. It's an invisible security measure and doesn't stress out the aggressor, which is what I like about it. Some countries even impose this in their alarm system regulations. Android has what it takes to make multi-PIN and profile switching easy Rita El Khoury / Android Authority Android already supports multiple users and profiles. You can set them up under Settings > System > Users and have multiple people (or your own multiple accounts) access their apps, files, photos, and data separately. But the current system is still very basic. If I pick up my phone now, I first need to check which user is selected before I enter the PIN. If I enter my secondary PIN on my main user profile, I get an error. I don't know why Android can't be smart enough, like any keypad or biometric entry system in this vast universe, to understand that different PINs, fingerprints, or faces unlock different users with different privileges, without the need to manually switch users beforehand. Android's lockscreen should behave like any keypad or face recognition entry system in the world and automatically recognize different users without manually switching first. That would be the basis of a decoy PIN-profile setup, but it would also make Android more user-friendly for families or couples who share one tablet with multiple users. No need to teach little Lucas that he has to turn on the screen, drop the notification shade, tap the user switcher, pick his name, and then enter his PIN so he can play Minecraft on the family tablet. Just turn on the screen and enter his PIN, and Android would know exactly which profile to unlock. Rita El Khoury / Android Authority There are other minor changes that would need to happen on Android to make this more compatible with a decoy PIN-profile situation. For instance, no big user-switching animation (see photo above) that shows exactly what is happening. The whole idea is to hide the subterfuge, not advertise it on the entire display. We'd also need an option to hide the user account picker at least in the most visible parts of the UI, like the drop-down notification shade. That's, uh, the exact opposite of what Google has done with the very visible, very obvious multi-user widget. Regardless, most of the work is already done in Android. There is native support for multiple users, and the encryption is strong enough to keep them separate. All we need is a few nips and tucks, and those of us who want to could start using multiple users to create a decoy profile. I hope Google makes those changes soon, or, if it really wants to create a tighter privacy sandbox, I hope it does the work to let us sequester parts of the OS under duress while pretending to unlock the whole system. Either way, there's too much of our personal data in our phones today, and having to resort to custom ROMs to properly protect it is not a real solution. Don't want to miss the best from Android Authority? Set us as a preferred source in Google Search to support us and make sure you never miss our latest exclusive reports, expert analysis, and much more. Follow