Questions & Answers (82)
- A: Good morning, Liz. No, this phone comes with triple minutes benefit. Smartphones have separate buckets of units for voice calls, text messaging and data usage and have the triple minute feature. For example, a 60 minute Pay As You Go TracFone card redeemed on a Smartphone will provide 180 minutes for voice, 180 text messages and 180 MB of data. Voice calls are charged at the rate of one (1) unit per minute. Text messages are charged at the rate of one (1) unit per text. Data is charged based on actual usage. ^Angel.
Q: can i keep my present phone #? (3 answers)
A: Good morning, joeboy. Yes. You would be able to transfer your old number along with your minutes. To better assist you, send us an email at [email protected]. Please include your name, phone number and the serial number or the IMEI/MEID of the phone. Just copy and paste your comments and include it in your email. ^Angel.Q: how do i add more airtime minutes to my lg lucky tracfone (2 answers)
A: You buy a prepaid Tracfone airtime card and follow the instructions on the card.Q: Transfer of existing minutes to new phone (3 answers)
A: Yes you can. I have had 6 tracfones and transfered my number, minutes, service time and Data time to each new one. Its easy to do on the tracfone site.- A: Yes, you can transfer your airtime and number to a new phone.
Q: Activation fee for the new phone? (2 answers)
A: I was told by a tracfone tech guy that you should NEVER switch sim cards between phones. Seems like you should be able to, but I didn't try it after talking with tech support. Hope this helps.Q: Do you get triple minutes with the LG Lucky Tracfone? (3 answers)
A: I do! BUT, what you get is triple talk minutes, triple message minutes and triple data bytes. Each one is used separately, but when you buy minutes, they load to all three applications for the phone.Q: Is this phone GPS enabled? (4 answers)
A: I don't know about GPS as such, but if you turn on "mobile data" and you have Google, you just say "OK Google," then I say, "Take me to..." wherever. I've learned that if I just state the name of the place, I get information, so it's quicker to use "Take me to..." AND, the Google talking directions are so much better than my old Nuvi GPS, plus you get traffic info, too.