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How Does ZOL’s New Pricing Compare To TelOne?

ZOL Increased their pricing again and you may be wondering how their internet packages compare to what’s on offer from TelOne, their biggest competitor. TelOne last revised their pricing a year ago and comparing the two services makes for an interesting comparison.

Capped packages

Capped packages have a limit to them. You get a monthly allocation of data and once you’ve exhausted your data you might have to rely on top-ups to get to the end of the month. If you’re looking to get these limited packages it might be a good idea to know how much data you use every month and then get the package closest to that.

TelOne

Home Basic: $15 for 8GB with claimed speeds of upto 2 Mbps

Home Plus: $25 for 30 GB with claimed speeds of upto 3 Mbps

Home Premier: $42 for 60GB with claimed speeds of upto 5 Mbps

ZOL

Fibroniks Lite: $49 for 25GB with claimed speeds of upto 10 Mbps

Fibroniks Basic Essentials: $59 for 35GB with claimed speeds of upto 10 Mbps

Fibroniks Family Essentials: $139 for 75GB with claimed speeds of upto 15 Mbps

Night Browsing packages

TelOne recently announced that they would be offering their own night browsing packages. These packages allow for subscribers to get data at a cheaper cost between certain hours (usually at night). Now that both ISP’s have these packages there’s also scope for us to compare the two:

TelOne

Home Basic + Night Browsing: $15 for 8GB with claimed speeds of upto 2 Mbps

Home Plus + Night Browsing: $25 for 30 GB with claimed speeds of upto 3 Mbps

Home Premier + Night Browsing: $42 for 60GB with claimed speeds of upto 5 Mbps

ZOL

Fibroniks Lite + Night Owl: $59 for 50GB with claimed speeds of upto 10 Mbps

Fibroniks Basic Essentials + Night Owl: $59 for with claimed speeds of upto 10 Mbps

Fibroniks Family Essentials + Night Owl: $139 for with claimed speeds of upto 15 Mbps

Uncapped Packages

The uncapped packages are more commonly known as unlimited packages and these remove a data limit for subscribers which makes them a great option if you stream a lot and if you also

TelOne

Infinity Pro: $89 for unlimited internet with claimed speeds of upto 5 Mbps

Intense: $120 for unlimited internet with claimed speeds of upto 20 Mbps

ZOL

Fibroniks family entertainment: $225 for unlimited internet with claimed speeds of upto 20 Mbps

Fibroniks modern family: $315 for unlimited internet with claimed speeds of upto 30 Mbps

Fibroniks turbo pack: $509 for unlimited internet with claimed speeds of upto 100 Mbps

Verdict

For a long time, I have understood why ZOL charges a premium for their service. It just works! It works better than TelOne, it’s usually faster than TelOne and because that was the case I could understand. But now that there’s such a huge gap in the pricing –and if TelOne also doesn’t increase their pricing- I’m not entirely sure how much it matters that ZOL is faster and there are fewer interferences.

I think it will depend from household to household and business to business. What’s your take? If you’re a ZOL subscriber will you be staying with them or this price increase is forcing your hand? One thing to seriously consider if you are thinking of making the switch is to wait a bit as TelOne may increase their prices. The economic situation is much trickier and there’s no guarantee of what TelOne’s service will cost in a month or two.

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