It depends on what you want. Do you want the newest phone every year when it comes out? Then doing Next 12 and trading it in every year is a better deal than buying it outright and trying to sell it.
Look at the SGS5. If you had bought it on Next when it came out and choose Next 12, you would still need to pay around $300 to finish off your payments and start a new Next contract on the SGS6. There are a ton of SGS5's on swappa right now for under $400.
Is it worth fronting the $300 or so and going through trying to sell it for <$100 profit? That's up to you I suppose but it would definitely not be worth the time for me.
Better deal? No.
The SGS5 is $500 just casually goggling new ones, and $650 at ATT. After 12mo on next 12 you will have paid $390. On swappa right now they sell for $340.
So buying it outright total cost. $160.
ATT next. $390.
Saving $230. Worth it to list it on swappa? Probably. If you hunted around I'm sure you can do better. Next is really just for the lazy.
if you like the newest devices every year right when they come out when they're at their highest price, then Next isn't a bad deal.
Now I remember why I quit posting here.
My post very explicitly says:
If you want to wait a year after a device is released and get it when you can find it for $150-200 cheaper, then sure you're correct. But you weren't going to find a SGS5 for $500 new last April.
Been fine for me. Zero interest loan basically, and you own the device at the end... you're paying full price though. You can also upgrade earlier than the usual 2 years if you so desire.
This is if you responded to everyone shopping for a computer to tell them to build their own. That isn't an appropriate model for 100% of people let alone 50% of the population. Only a small crowd will shop around for used phones. Similar to car shopping, it needs to be clearly defined if you're buying new or used up front.Because you don't like being corrected? You can buy below MSRP right off the bat if you're not an idiot and don't shop at the corporate stores.
This is if you responded to everyone shopping for a computer to tell them to build their own. That isn't an appropriate model for 100% of people let alone 50% of the population.
I think for a lot of people the idea of selling their used phone is a complete non- starter, so plans like AT&T next or tmobile jump look attractive as they can decrease the time between upgrades without adding significant cost.Sure but this is an enthusiast forum- you will get told to build a computer on here!
Plus I don't get why normals can't take advantage of this stuff. I got my wife's Note 4 day 1 for $250 off simply by bringing in a trade in, a deal that was on Bestbuy's website and posted in their store. I don't expect a normal knew to buy a $40 Windows Phone a week before as a trade in like I did, but they could have traded in their last model and still gotten a huge discount.
Other big deals hit on times like Black Friday- when normals know to look for deals- or around Christmas. I know most people aren't going to get a deal, because hell they couldn't get a deal if you circled the ad for them on BF and sent them into the store. Some people suck at deal hunting, which is awesome because they they pay all the margin that keeps the stores running for you and me. But being a deal-hunter is not a nerd thing- I know some old women that know the relative price of everything in JC Penny like I know computer parts.
I think the problem is that too many people just wander into that carrier store like sheep ready to be slaughtered. The deals are almost never at the store, they are at Wal-Mart, Best Buy, Radio Shack, Amazon, and other entities that do more than sell phones.
I think for a lot of people the idea of selling their used phone is a complete non- starter, so plans like AT&T next or tmobile jump look attractive as they can decrease the time between upgrades without adding significant cost.