Shop carefully for cell service without a contract

More people are tearing up the traditional two-year cell phone-and-service contract and opting to go with no-contract options instead. It's a trend that started when T-Mobile shook up the industry last year, joining upstart prepaid and no-contract carriers by dropping service agreements from its lineup. AT&T and Verizon now also offer contract-free service plans alongside those that come with a two-year commitment.

But can you really save money with no-contract service? Our new study of 84 plan combinations offered by 12 carriers found that in some cases you can.

Unfortunately, the business of shopping for the best deal has become a lot more complicated. It can be difficult to get the different types of service plans to line up for easy comparisons. That’s because no-contract deals, which usually have lower monthly service charges than traditional plans, can also come with hefty price tags for their phones. Meanwhile, major carriers hide handset costs in the overall monthly fee on their traditional contract plans.

Adding to the confusion, most carriers now let no-contract customers pay for a new phone in installments, while some require that you pay full price up front. (Even though these plans have no contract for the cellular service, you do enter into an agreement for the device in the case of installment plans. If you are paying monthly for the device on an installment plan and cancel your service, you will still owe money for the phone under the equipment contract.) Most carriers also let you take the phone you already own over to their network—if it’s compatible with their system’s technology.

Price isn't everything when shopping for cellular service. Read our cell phone & service buying guide, which Ratings of 21 U.S. and Canadian carriers.

To sort all this out, you need a new cellular shopping strategy, and we developed one to help you find the best values that combine low price with high satisfaction.

We gathered up all that messy pricing data and differing details about the terms of the various plans and levels of service available from major contract, no-contract, and prepaid carriers. To allow you to also make your decision based on overall satisfaction with service, we confined our comparison to the cellular service providers rated on that score by the Consumer Reports National Research Center, based on its survey last year of 58,399 ConsumerReports.org subscribers with cell-phone service in September, 2013.

Finally, we created three model customer households—an individual user who consumed about average levels of 600 voice minutes, 600 text messages, and 2GB of data per month; a family of four devouring a total of 1,800 minutes, 7,600 texts, and 8GB of data each month; and a couple using only 400 minutes, 200 texts, and 1GB of data per month between them.