Forum Discussion

tyty23's avatar
tyty23
Network Novice
Hace 2 años

feeling robbed

why is it that the trade in value for our phones is so low however we still have to pay so much for the phone. it makes no sense that i have a $200+ balance left on my phone but this same phone is only worth $57 if i trade it

  • T-mobile does not set the prices of phones, nor the value of phones.

    The manufacturer of the phone sets the price on the phone, and T-mobile simply sells it for such price. If you buy the phone for the price, then you decided it was worth the price to purchase it. In 2 years, the same exact phone is going be sold for 100-200 less brand new. That's not because phones always cost less to produce after a year, its because they're selling last gen devices to a different target demographic, and likely have already paid off their R&D and marketing costs.

     

    When you attempt to trade in a phone, Assurant is actually purchasing it without really seeing it. They will ask a few qualifying questions of the rep who helps you, but otherwise cannot see the scratches, general wear and tear of the device. A broken back glass iPhone still qualifies as a good trade-in, but is going to require a $150 repair once it is received. Since Assurant accepts a wide variety of conditions, they level out the value between the entire range of possible qualities. Whatever the value T-Mobile pays out to you, Assurant approves and reimburses Tmo.

     

    Trade-ins are never fair value, never when you go to a car lot or a cell phone company. If you get $800 off a new phone with trade in, that is like the $20-350 your phone is worth and the rest comes out of manufacturer incentives and T-Mobile's marketing budget. T-Mobile is subsidizing your phone with a promotion, but if no promotion is available you can only get whatever Assurant is willing to pay for a "used functioning any condition" phone.

  • gramps28's avatar
    gramps28
    Router Royalty

    This is why I never trade in a phone when you can go to Swappa and sell the phone for more money.

  • syaoran's avatar
    syaoran
    Transmission Titan

    Waiting for a trade-in promo where T-Mobile makes up the difference in credits over 24 months can help.  As gramps said though.  Selling your device on Swappa will get you fair market value.  The companies that take these trade-ins for carriers, Asurion and Assurant never come close to a fair value.  You could literally send them a brand new sealed in the box S22 Ultra and you would be lucky to get $200 in trade in value from them.

    Depending on the device you have traded in.  Different manufacturers tend to offer some good trade-in deals.   Samsung on the rare occasion, will offer a flat amount on any working Galaxy device, no matter how old.  These are the promos to look out for.  BestBuy tends to be a little better usually with their trade-in values and sometimes they have some decent promos as well.  

  • Ric221's avatar
    Ric221
    Bandwidth Buddy

    Trades are not meant to benefit you. It's a way to trick you into losing money to the Carriers. As stated above New phone 1000 1 week old phone of the same type 150 in trade value. So who wins in the end? Not you.

    Today Is The Tomorrow That You Worried About Yesterday 

  • Nova's avatar
    Nova
    Roaming Rookie

    T-mobile does not set the prices of phones, nor the value of phones.

    The manufacturer of the phone sets the price on the phone, and T-mobile simply sells it for such price. If you buy the phone for the price, then you decided it was worth the price to purchase it. In 2 years, the same exact phone is going be sold for 100-200 less brand new. That's not because phones always cost less to produce after a year, its because they're selling last gen devices to a different target demographic, and likely have already paid off their R&D and marketing costs.

     

    When you attempt to trade in a phone, Assurant is actually purchasing it without really seeing it. They will ask a few qualifying questions of the rep who helps you, but otherwise cannot see the scratches, general wear and tear of the device. A broken back glass iPhone still qualifies as a good trade-in, but is going to require a $150 repair once it is received. Since Assurant accepts a wide variety of conditions, they level out the value between the entire range of possible qualities. Whatever the value T-Mobile pays out to you, Assurant approves and reimburses Tmo.

     

    Trade-ins are never fair value, never when you go to a car lot or a cell phone company. If you get $800 off a new phone with trade in, that is like the $20-350 your phone is worth and the rest comes out of manufacturer incentives and T-Mobile's marketing budget. T-Mobile is subsidizing your phone with a promotion, but if no promotion is available you can only get whatever Assurant is willing to pay for a "used functioning any condition" phone.

  • gramps28's avatar
    gramps28
    Router Royalty

    Even Google is offering less money for trade ins.

  • Going into the T-Mobile store… normal water and tears small scratches on the screen - they want someone to go have the screen repaired for $280 (Apple 12) to get the $832 promotion. Does anytime know where the stores are getting the guidelines for these phone inspections? I can see it if it's cracked to damaged… but they declined to accept the phone! Any ideas of who to contact. Within the 14 day grace period!