Instead of a two-year term, T-Mobile is selling a discounted Galaxy Note 9 and charging customers over the course of three years.
The post T-Mobile soft launches 36-month financing for Galaxy Note 9 appeared first on Pocketnow.
Instead of a two-year term, T-Mobile is selling a discounted Galaxy Note 9 and charging customers over the course of three years.
The post T-Mobile soft launches 36-month financing for Galaxy Note 9 appeared first on Pocketnow.
If you need a Mac right now, but cannot finance it with your own lines of credit, you could have done so for a while with potentially new offers. Not anymore in Great Britain.
The post PayPal Credit and Barclays can no longer be used to finance Apple purchases in UK appeared first on Pocketnow.
That's US$825, or about an 18 percent premium on what the Essential PH-1 is marked for in the United States. Shipping begins within a month.
The post Essential Phone from Canada’s Telus is a terrifying $1,050 appeared first on Pocketnow.
Zero down on devices won't last for long on T-Mobile's refreshed leasing program with early upgrade opportunities, especially as phone prices skyrocket.
The post T-Mobile’s JUMP On Demand to require down payments on some devices next year appeared first on Pocketnow.
The new ODM device is the Un-carrier's first in years and comes along with a new affordable phone series and a revised leasing scheme.
The post T-Mobile reveals REVVL with new JUMP On Demand and Smartpicks programs appeared first on Pocketnow.
You can upgrade your phone once every 30 days under this new plan. But the program also acts as a more standard 18-month leasing program.
The post T-Mobile updates JUMP On Demand with monthly switcharoos appeared first on Pocketnow.
Surface Plus will make paying and upgrading the Surface Pro, Surface Laptop, Surface Book and Surface Studio more affordable. There's a business plan, too.
The post Microsoft Surface Plus brings zero-interest leasing with 18-month upgrades appeared first on Pocketnow.
If you ever purchased a phone or even accessories direct from Motorola and was able to get financing from the Motorola Credit program, bad news: the bank behind the service is ending it on December 3.
Comenity Bank sent letters to Moto Credit account holders notifying them that if they do have a balance, they’ll still have to pay them out, though only through snail mail. No new purchases can be added onto the account from November 29. Once the balance hits zero, the account is closed.
There are plenty of options for deferred interest or even low-interest financing out there, though just having a $1,000 credit line for Motorola products was nice to have. We’ll have to see if this program gets replaced.
The post Comenity to end Motorola Credit program on December 3 appeared first on Pocketnow.
It’s not just the Pixel phones that have gotten a fresh dose of financing help. Products from the entire Google Store are now eligible for financing in the US, backed by Synchrony Bank.For purchases between $149 and $298 (before taxes), special financing can be obtained for a six-month period. 12-month financing can be obtained for shopping carts worth more than $299. Only the Pixels get 24-month ...
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