Choosing
Choosing a prepaid calling card
Working out which prepaid international calling card to buy is difficult. There are many cards available; tariffs and conditions are really complicated.
If you have ever had problems understanding you mobile or home bill, the fact that calling cards are complicated will not be a surprise. Even people that work in the calling card industry have difficulty working out which card is the most competitive for each destination. So, what hope has a normal person in working out what to buy?
The best advice we can give is to try different products until you work out what is best for you - even if you use the wrong card you will probably cut your costs by 50%.
Choosing a card
Shops normally don't have much information or give useful advice. You might be sold whatever is in stock - this could be a bad-value card where the credit disappears quickly or where the service means your calls don't connect properly. When choosing a card, take into account:
- The tariffs for the country(ies) you call.
- The length of your calls - Some cards have a small connection charge which is a disadvantage if you make lots of short calls, but no problem if you talk for an hour at a time to family and friends.
- How much you call - All cards expire (usually 30-90 days from the first time you use it to call). Some cards also have cards have a daily maintenance charge, which obviously matters less if you use the card quickly.
The main thing to remember is that the card with the lowest rate per minute might not be the most efficient card for you. Some of the cards we sell might appear not to the best per-minute value on the first sight, but they may have the advantage of no extra charges, so work out well for the majority of our customers.
Why is this so complicated?
The main problem is that all providers pay about the same amount of money for the phone calls they resell with cards - and they also all want to have the best price to advertise on their calling cards. So instead of having a simple cost per minute, they add daily maintenance charges and connection charges as this allows a lower cost per minute. Without going into the maths - it's obvious that a connection charge means your average cost per minute is higher - so higher connection charges are OK if you make long calls, but add up quickly if you make lots of short calls.
HELP!! If you're still confused, you are welcome to get in touch with Just Landed by email with any questions about calling cards and we will do our best to help.
Also in this section
- Introduction: The German Telecommunication market
- Calling: How to make a phone call in Germany
- Call-by-call: The easy way of saving money on your phone calls
- Getting a phone line: How to get a fixed line at home
- Public phones: Phone booths and phone cards
- Information: Phone books, enquiries and important numbers
- Mobile phones: Mobile operators and networks
- Mobile rates: How to decide on a calling plan
- Calling cards: How to save money on international calls
- Choosing: Choosing a prepaid calling card
- How to use: Using an international phonecard
- Internet access: How to get your internet connection at home
- Internet cafés: Where to get a access in public
Comments from other users
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Mobile internet in Germany and mobile phone
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I have a free voucher. Since I already have one, you can use it: "Germany"
The SIM-Card will be free, with 20 € of credit. The daily data flatrate is 2.50 € and to call you always pay 9 cent. There is also a cost cap: you will never pay more than 39 € a month (data and national calls ans SMS. For me it was a valid substitute for a fix phone line.