A Guide to Sim Hopping in Australia

Hi guys! I got bored today and decided to write a guide on sim hopping, since all I could find on the subject were scattered discussions littered about across the site.

So what exactly is sim hopping?

Rather giving you a boring definition chock-full of technical terms, I will instead give an example:

Say you are currently using a generic mobile prepaid plan. Every 30 days you pay the provider $40.00 for unlimited calls, unlimited text messages, and 7 GB of data. One day, you see a deal from Lycamobile. For your first 28 days as a new Lycamobile customer, you get 6 GB Data, unlimited local & international calls for the low, low price of $4.90!
This offers a much better value compared to your current plan, so you purchase the Lycamobile sim card, wait for it to arrive in your mail, and then activate/register the sim card online by following the instructions provided. During the registration process, you put in a request to port/transfer your current mobile number to Lycamobile. After activation, you wait for a few hours before removing your old sim card from your phone and swapping in the new Lycamobile sim card. You restart you phone, and for the next 28 days you get to enjoy unlimited calls and 6 GB of data, with the knowledge that you have paid less than $5.00 for nearly the exact same service as before.
While enjoying your new Lycamobile service, you see another deal pop up on OzB. Kogan is currently having a deal on their extra large prepaid plan! New customers get 30 days of unlimited calls/text and 14 GB of data for only $1.00! Sweet! So you purchase a Kogan sim, and on the expiration day of your Lycamobile service, you port/transfer your number to Kogan.

This is sim hopping in a nutshell - continuously switching between mobile service providers who offer a better deal.

Why sim hopping?

Now, you may think that sim hopping sounds like a whole lot of work for not much gain. After all, you have to scrounge the website for deals, make online purchases, wait for your purchase to arrive, keep track of your service expiration dates, go through the arduous process of online sim activation and identity verification, pry open your phone to swap sim cards, and wait and wait and wait, hoping that the activation/transfer process will go through without a hitch. Why, oh why would anyone in their right minds would ever want to do this - on a monthly basis!?

Well, it really depends. For me, my greatest motivation would be data. I have a very shitty internet connection and the landlord is unwilling to switch because the landline is bundled into the broadband subscription package. She wants to keep things as simple and as hassle-free as possible, so changing providers is a big no-no. On rare occasions I can go for a whole week without losing a single packet, while on others the line status is stuck in a perpetual loop between "connected" and "disconnected". On days like that, I have to rely on mobile data. Unfortunately, current mobile broadband offerings require you to choose between bad-value-for-money, or low-to-zero-flexibility. You either pay an exorbitant monthly fee for a barely acceptable amount of data with no rollover (low flexibility), or make a one-off payment for a teensy bit of data (bad value) meant to last you a whole year - with limited rollover.

However, in the land of frequent discounts, there exists a third option. In an attempt to lure in new customers, mobile service providers in Australia frequently offer their prepaid services at crazy discount prices, at times even operating at a loss (e.g. Kogan $1 sim deals). And for a very, very low introductory cost, newcomers can gain access to unlimited text/calls and large amounts of data for their first 28 or 30 days. To prevent their loyal, existing customers from joining in on the fun, introductory pricing is offered to new customers ONLY. Fortunately, we can circumvent that by switching providers on a monthly basis, always posing as a new customer that is porting/transferring in from another provider.

By continuously switching to the best available offer, we get to maximize the amount of value we get for our money. And thus, sim hopping is born. Why pay $40 over and over again each month for a measly 7 GB when I can just rip open a new $1 starter pack and get 14 GB?

Some people consider sim hopping a huge hassle, while others may find enjoyment from abusing the system. Is sim hopping truly worth the effort? You decide.

Some pitfalls and annoyances of sim hopping

  1. Failed activations.
    Your new sim card may fail to activate for any number of reasons, and you become stuck with an old sim card that has expired, and your new sim card is now a poorly designed Frisbee with bad balance and awful aerodynamics. Depending on how poorly the porting process went, you might even have trouble recharging and receiving calls on your old sim card. You reach out to both your old and new service providers, but all they do is point fingers at each other. Your mobile number is now stuck in limbo. The worst case scenario is to get a new sim card, tell all your friends and families about your new mobile number, update all your online accounts, perhaps reprint all your business cards, and curse whoever introduced you to sim hopping for making your life a miserable hell.
    Read on for best practices on how to avoid this.
  2. No service.
    You live beyond the coverage area of your new service provider. Doozy oopsie. Or maybe their service tower is broadcasting on a spectrum not supported by your device. Should have done some research before taking the dive, eh? Some mobile providers provide their coverage map on their website. Or you could activate a cheap prepaid sim, pop it into your phone and walk around to check for adequate connectivity. Or, you can, you know, simply ask around. Talk to people living in the area. Research, research, and more research.
  3. Provider intervention.
    Mobile providers have been racking their brains trying to dissuade people from sim hopping. It has been ages since Telstra prepaid sims last went on discount (it used to happen pretty regularly), and Telstra have changed their prepaid offerings time and time again to combat abuse. Optus has changed their sim expiration dates, requiring prepaid sims to be activated within 30 days of purchase. I have also read comments about sim activations triggering credit checks or failing arbitrarily because some user has activated too many sim cards in quick succession. It has yet to occur to me, but your mileage may vary. Fortunately, there are always plenty of other mobile providers vying for your attention (e.g. Amaysim, Kogan, Boost, Lycamobile, Lebara, Woolworths mobile, Aldimobile, Dodo, etc) if you don't feel like tangoing with customer service on reviving a dead Frisbee.
  4. Buying and activating too many sim cards.
    Seriously, this can be potentially cause problems with new activations. I don't know if this is true, but I have been told that you get flagged as a terrorist if you have more than 5 active mobile numbers at the same time, because only a terrorist would need that many active numbers… to avoid suspicion? Or something like that. It makes zero sense to me, so make of it what you will. Who knows? I've been told plenty of weirder things that turn out to be true.
  5. You tell me.

Sim hopping best practices

  1. Maintain a main mobile number. You know, the number your mates dial in order to keep in touch with you? Yeah, that number. NEVER perform sim hopping with that number. Choose a cheap, nice, and safe long expiry plan, preferably one that requires you to recharge once per year, transfer your main mobile number to that plan, KEEP IT THERE until the day you die, and only use that number for receiving calls. Amaysim has a great "$10 Prepaid As You Go" plan where your credit lasts for 365 days. Vodafone has a similar 365 Plus prepaid plan as well. Or if you want the best value for your money, I recommend another readup on Telstra prepaid to find out how you can get the best coverage, cheap rates, long expiry, and the ability to spend your Telstra recharge credit on Google Play purchases and various other services.
  2. Buy an unlocked, 3G/4G enabled dual sim mobile phone. Here are some suggestions on what you can buy. With a 3G/4G dual sim phone you can receive calls on your main sim and use your sim hopping sim for everything else - sending text, making and receiving phone calls, and mobile data. Having a proper dual sim phone makes sim hopping a whole lot easier - otherwise you would always have to leave the house with two mobile devices in tow, which in my opinion is one device too many.
  3. Mobile number transfers can take anywhere between a few minutes to 24 hours to complete. Porting operates half-time (10:00 am to 6:00 pm) on Saturdays and it is not available during Sundays and public holidays. Always port your number during working hours on weekdays. That way, if any problem occurs you can expect customer service to be up at your beck and call.
  4. Set up a calendar reminder to recharge your main number. Year long expiries are easy to forget, and you seriously do not want to lose your main number.

FAQ

  1. Do I need to discontinue my prepaid service with my current provider before switching to another?
    No, there is no point in doing so. Simply activate the sim card from your new provider and request to transfer/port in your existing number. Or if you do not wish to keep your existing number, simply leave it be and it will automatically be cancelled within a month after expiring, as is common with most prepaid plans that do not offer long expiration. If you request termination from your current provider, they can (and most likely will) terminate your service immediately and cause you to lose your existing number.
  2. Do I always have to transfer/port my old number to a new mobile service provider?
    No, unless you want to keep the number. Sim hopping is actually much easier (the activation process becomes much faster) if you ditch your old number in your old sim and activate with the new number that comes with the new sim. As mentioned before, your old number will automatically be cancelled in a month or so after expiring, so no worries about having too many active numbers at the same time. Your mates might find it a little annoying to receive phone calls and texts from an unfamiliar number each time though.
  3. Can I port my number to a new sim card with the same provider (e.g. porting from Telstra to Telstra)?
    Yes and no. Most of the cheap prepaid deals you find online are for NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY. Sim hopping abuses this by posing you as a new customer porting in from a different provider (e.g. porting from Vodafone to Telstra). Your current provider will most likely refuse by giving you an activation failure if you are porting in as an existing customer. However, some providers might allow for an exception if you contact their customer service and ask nicely.
    If you don't feel like spending time doing a salsa with customer service, an alternate option is to perform a double hop (old provider -> new provider with cheap sim -> old provider) back to your old provider within the span of a few hours and enjoy the same benefits as a new customer. Collect cheap ($1 / $2) or free sim starter packs from different providers (e.g. Free starter packs from Kogan, $1 sims from Vodafone or $2 sims from Telstra and Optus, etc) for double hopping. Some mobile providers have measures in place to prevent this sort of abuse, so again, your mileage may vary.
  4. I live in a rural area with limited coverage. Should I try changing service providers?
    Sim hopping is best suited for people living in the city, or a in densely populated area where you can expect decent coverage from all 3 main mobile service providers (Telstra, Vodafone, and Optus). If you live in a rural area with limited coverage, you are better off sticking with the provider with the best coverage (usually Telstra).

Edit 1: a word.

Comments

  • +4

    Interesting write up. If you would like this as a Wiki article, you can create one here and it'll be archived as part of the Ozb Wiki 'Other Pages' section.

    • Eh, I got sick of writing about halfway through. Maybe somebody else can proofread the whole thing and dump the results into a wiki article for me ;)

      • A good guide. Just copy & paste into a new wiki & others will tidy it up & hopefully update it.

        That's how the Telstra pre-paid starter pack Wiki started - but & pasted from deal comments. Unfortunately SIM wikis take a lot of updating. The Telstra Wiki needs a complete rewrite as contains information from years ago, alongside latest info.

    • Was discussed years back in Telstra pre-paid starter pack Wiki as cheap option using Telstra Starter Packs & Creditme2u to transfer credit between SIMs.

      There was little interest & my original suggestions on SIM swapping have been removed.

      I've been doing this for many years, paying no more than $1/28-30d for calls & data, plus up to $2/yr for main phone number on second phone just for incoming calls. But suggesting this in SIM deals just attracted negs as too much work for little benefit.

  • Yes make it sticky please somewhere.

  • +3

    SIM hopping for data is almost redundant but there are still deals to be had for calls/text … the Groupon deal for 6 months of amaysim for $30 recently … I've been using 4G as my primary internet connection for a while now and used to hop around taking advantage of dirt cheap data but given Optus are now doing 100GB+Free Music/Stan&Netflix streaming for $70 per month … there just isn't a need anymore. To be fair this could be reduced to ~$40 per month if one signs up for 24 months and sells the "free" iPad 128GB 4G for ~$700.

    I wonder if the act of SIM hopping has driven competition enough to render it moot.

    Good write up nonetheless.

    • $70 per month for 100 GB may be fine for you, but at worst the most I'll ever need is about 12 GB a month. I just don't find it justifiable to pay an extra $70 on top of a prepaid mobile service and a landline + broadband bundle.

    • The $70,100gb plan includes data free Netflix? I was in tbeoptud dhio ahd they said it didnr. Is that in the month to month plan?

      • Yeah, month to month. Asked Support Chat and they bumped me to 100GB and gave me music and video streaming as well. I sighed up to the month to month 1 week before it was bonus 50gb. Rang Optus and they said I'd need to cancel and resign up … Online chat just did it in the spot.

        • What modem are you using?

        • @albanyson: An Android phone.

        • @kywst:
          Are you watching Netflix on the phone, or on the TV? (Via hotspot?) Or direct plugin?

  • SIM hopping for data is almost redundant

    Almost redundant isn't a thing. And if you're trying to say stay with the same provider because it costs the same you need you head read.

    • Almost redundant isn't a thing.

      almost
      ˈɔːlməʊst
      not quite; very nearly.

      redundant
      rɪˈdʌnd(ə)nt
      not or no longer needed or useful; superfluous.

      And if you're trying to say stay with the same provider because it costs the same you need you head read.

      Not sure where you got that from. Perhaps read again and check definitions of words you don't understand.

  • +4

    Nice write up. Although I do think it's ok to use your main number for sim hopping as long as you're prepared to be without service for short periods on the odd occasion.

    Of course if run a business and use that number as your main number don't do it.

    Anyone actually lost a number by porting?

    • +2

      I did actually, Optus had a major system stuff up and their porting took well over 3 weeks to complete. So the number was in limbo for the entire time and I couldn't abort the porting process.

      Decided to get a new number with Kogan instead.

      This is the main downside of sim hopping, there might be outages in porting and you might get caught out without a number, from a few hours to a few weeks :(

      • +1

        Damn. I also had some porting issues with Optus. Their support team dealing with the issues is pretty bad as well. I now try to avoid them if I'm sim hopping.

      • Was this Optus to Optus reseller? I avoid this by going to Aldi or Boost in between. Even Optus to Vodafone can take some time.

        I've never run into any issues porting my main number. I have a second number that is on Amaysim 365 day prepaid just in case. I usually set up the port to trigger overnight, swap the old (still active) SIM into an old phone, and put the new (not yet active) SIM into my normal phone. When I wake up, the port is completed!

        Despite the 'official' porting times, I've had a port go through from Telstra to Virgin on a Sunday. But to be safe and have zero downtime, work around the porting hours.

      • The speed of porting number between suppliers wasn't my concern. I ported my number twice and both the occasion I was been charged a porting fee. Anyone have experience about how to avoid that annoying fee?? Or it just depend on suppliers?

        • +1

          I usually scan the terms and conditions or the critical information summary. Usually it's only post-paid where providers will charge a port out fee with TPG being a notable exception ($11 port out fee, not sure if still exists).

    • +2

      I sim hop with my main number (for past 18 months), but I accept brief periods of outage with no service. No major stuff ups, only had Optus take 6 business hours one time, mostly ports take < 40 mins from submitting until active. To counteract this, I now port during the last day of active service, and accept there will be one less day of credit/service. I also keep a second SIM active in an old phone on a long life plan, so I've got a working backup phone for outgoing calls & texts, even if porting takes longer than expected.

    • I used to work for Telstra for many years.

      Porting problems more often manifest in routing problems, or alternatively, can get stuck mid-way (ie, number not connected). When a routing problem occurs one carrier may be able to SMS or call you, but not another. They can take some time to fix. They aren't that common, but I wouldn't SIM hop with a main number if constant connectivity is essential for you.

      I never once saw a number lost from porting.

    • +2

      me and the gf have been sim hopping for about 2 years, i dont think the possibility even crossed our minds. worst ive had is trying to port within one network and having to wait 2 days for the port to go through. lesson learned, business hours to other networks, and it rarely takes more than an hour or two. and the switchover seems to be instant. keep an eye on your signal, and once its gone it means the new one is ready. so actual downtime for receiving calls depends on how much you are watching for the changeover to occur.

      and to make it even easier for the gf, id usually process hers just before bedtime on expiry day, and shed pop in the new one when she wakes up. wifi means no downtime overnight

    • Murphy's law states that you will run into a bad hiccup eventually ;)

  • good writeup. nice one

    does telstra still let you send credit between prepaid accounts? with that system, a really good way to do it (with dual sim phone) is have your primary sim that never changes, and then every month pop in a new telstra sim in the second slot. youd go through 13 telstra sims in a year, so this relies on stocking up during a sale

    the difference is that the junk sims get the usual large amounts of data and credit, but can also send a bit of credit to the primary sim. that credit can fund the primary sim for calls and sms, so you dont need to pay for usage of your main number, or explain to your friends why you call them from a new number every month

    • +1

      The CM2U thing with new prepaid activations still work (I think), but Telstra have made it so incredibly convoluted that there is no easy way to explain it. Not really worth my time.

  • +1

    I've been doing it for over a year. Doing it without using your main number is a waste of time. You just have to make sure you always switch networks, 99.9% of porting issues are when people go from one Optus reseller to another.

    • I tend to agree. Otherwise everytime you call someone they would be wondering why you aren't using your main number. It then get's confusing when they don't know which number to call you back on, wondering which number they should save in their contacts and so on. You're just wasting your time having to explain the situation to them each time.

  • Have been looking into this myself lately as I've been testing a solution that suits my Data heavy usage.

    So far, I have 2 Sims:
    [#1] In my iPhone 5 for incoming/outgoing calls and SMS on Telstra Long Life Pre-Paid.
    [#2] In a Huawei E5573 4G modem on Optus or Vodafone for 4G DATA.

    This combination is great except the need to have the 4G modem with me constantly.
    Having looked through the 4G+3G dual sim phones list above, they're just not a solution for me right now.

    My next step is to find a small 4G+WIFI modem to mod into an old Morphie (or generic Battery) case cover, then slide my iPhone into that.

    I'm guessing the most difficult part will then be getting low level access to the power states of the 4G+WIFI radios.

  • Such an informative and inspiring post! Well done.

    Question time: why had I been charged a porting fee every time I port between suppliers? (twice)

    • Certain providers garner a bad rep on ozbargain for that exact reason - having hidden fees and charges in the terms & conditions or in the critical information summary document. Porting fees, exit fees, demanding (and then keeping) a deposit, overcharging for excess usage, unreasonable sim card delivery charges, etc.

      See here for an example. I try to avoid letting my personal bias slip into in the guide, but this company have been such the paragon of dubious practices (and the main cause of my bad internet) that I truly think everyone should steer clear.

      All I can say is that a little research goes a long way. Skip the terms & conditions if you want (too damn lengthy and bloody wordy), but you should definitely go through the critical information summary document (usually just 2 or 3 pages). And then do some Googling to see what others are saying about the company. Research, research, and more research.

      • Errrr… In my case, Vodafone to optus and optus to kogan. I guess albanyson pin-pointed the reason. Sad.

        • Ah yes, stay away from long term contracts. Most providers charge an early termination fee if you leave early. Prepaid all the way for sim hopping :)

    • From pay as you go, you shouldn't. From month to month, post paid, you likely will.

      • Does your 'month to month' mean prepaid as well? I'm currently with kogan for their last year's deal which is prepaid for the whole 12 months.

        • I was referring to month to month post paid. No lock in contract. I found,seitch first from post paid to pre paid with the provider and then Port out to a better deal, and you don't get charged a porting fee.

        • @albanyson: 👍

  • I'm with Amaysim and have just received a free Telstra starter sim. There's a 6 month Amaysim deal through Groupon that I would like to get and I want to keep my current mobile number. How do I go about getting the Amaysim deal with minimal downtime. I don't want to incur any costs with Telstra. Is this possible? How do I go about doing it?

    Can I buy the Amaysim deal now? Then after the Amaysim sim arrives in the mail, activate the Telstra sim and transfer my number to Telstra. Presumably I should start the activation process on a week night (Mon to Thu) and it should be active the next morning? Then once my service is active with Telstra (could check by putting the Telstra sim in my phone) I then logon to the Amaysim website and activate the Amaysim sim and set it to transfer my current mobile number to Amaysim? Will this all work or do I have to do something else? How long would I need to be with Telstra before transferring back to Amaysim (to ensure I am considered a new customer)?

  • Does anyone have an issue with porting your number to vodafone? The sim gets activated but the porting always fail. I always get message like bellow and need to call vodafone up and go through the dreadful voice recording for porting.

    "Success! We’re now working to bring your number 0400 xxx xxx to Vodafone
    Your temporary mobile number is: 0499 xxx yyy
    You can use this number to recharge and sign in to MyVodafone.
    Looks like there was an issue with porting your number.
    To complete the process, please call 1555 from your Vodafone mobile or 1300 650 410 from another number.
    In the meantime, you can still use your temporary number."

  • +1

    If anyone is wondering how many active sims you can own simultaneously.
    I sim hop 5 prepaid sims at the moment, mine, my wife's, mum's, a home-wifi on 4g (15gb/m is enough for my household), and a data topper to take advantage of something dirt cheap like optus $3 15gb with 7 days expiry, $1 ovo, $0 belong, use up the cheap data on few extra downloads/updates while all my other ones still active, if I want to.
    Plus, quite possibly one or two (or three?) sims that I have forgotten over the last year or so that I have activated and used up the data and left it idle and forgot the numbers already.
    All in my name, so I can port them at a time suitable, so far no problems at all, maybe it's all too stingy, but it really have saved my lots of teleco money which I can use to buy other 'wonderful' things on OZB.

  • Has anyone had issues lately continuously porting a single number to different providers each month?

    • What sort of issues you mean ?

      Some provider may not let you switch within 30-31days of ur last plan with them, I think Kogan won’t let you sign up as new customer if you fall under 30 days.

      • I haven't had any personally but some people have when porting to Woolworths with the new style Starter Kits.

      • With kogan, can you continuously just keep buying their cheap sims and make a new number?
        So i dont have to port out and in, as I am using it just for data.

      • Yes, had issue when port back with Kogan, it seems that they request you to stay with other provider for 60 days.

        • Tested 31 days last time. One day less, it does not allow new customer voucher.

  • the latest victim here. port only went halfway through from voda to telstra. telstra rekcon i was with boost which i was before i was with vodafone. headache.

    • What they are saying now? And are you losing your number?

      • i can only receive calls and texts. i cannot make calls or send texts, i also have no data.

        • +1

          You really need a dual SIM phone. I currently have my main numbers with Vodafone prepaid. Credits expired in January, but account expires Jan 2020. It does not affect me to get incoming calls and messages. I can make all outgoing activities on my 2nd SIM from various deals here. By doing like this, you do not need to port your numbers often or only port your 2nd SIM, which is less important anyway. Thus, avoid these issues and enjoy the free service.

          P.S. Vodafone allows prepaid numbers existing up to 395 days without recharge.

      • they say "error provisioning". should take 24-48 hrs to fix. that was monday.

        • Keep calling until it is fixed

          • @SnoozeAndLose: they hang up on you. they promise to call you back but won't. i just ported back to voda. finished in about 10 mins. everything's working now. with telstra, if things (happen to) work, they are good. if things go wrong, either no one has a (profanity) clue how to fix it or it takes ages to get it fixed.

  • +1

    One thing no-one has mentioned is that you should set up a calendar reminder (if you can't do it immediately) to cancel the credit card auto pay that many providers make you set up as part of the activation process so you don't get hit with the normal price at the end of the honeymoon if you forget, e.g. Kogan XL $99 for 3 months instead of $15 for 3 months.
    Ouch.
    You can often do it easily through the web portal, or the app, e.g. Amaysim.
    One time Amaysim charged me $30 when I forgot but as I'd not used any data or calls, and had been overseas, their support was nice enough to reverse the charge on the phone when I asked nicely, explaining I was away.
    Great review, btw.

  • is it required to cancel your older prepaid service or can they continue to bill you? If they can continue to bill you, is it legal since you no longer have an active service with previous provider?

    • If you do not recharge a prepaid plan, most telcos allow your numbers being active for 90+ days before they disconnect your service, during which you can port out. You do not need to do anything if you do not want to keep the numbers.

  • I read conflicting suggestions about sim hopping to the same provider. Using the strategy of doing "old provider ->new provider -> old provider", do we just need to wait a few hours after porting into a new provider, then go back to the old provider? Some people suggest that we need to wait for minimum 30 days?

    • Provider decides whether you are a new customer at its discretion. There is no generic rules.

      With Kogan, same number needs to be away for 31 days before it is considered as a new customer.

  • After the TPG / Vodafone merger, does Vodafone still allow one day back to back porting (e.g. vodafone>Telstra>vodafone) ? I still have a few $40 vodafone starter packs that need to be used before September expiry. Any suggestion? Thanks.

    • Worked for me.

      You need a credit card now though.

  • Coles Mobile Starter Packs may not complete Activation (will be Stuck in Provisioning).

    If your Coles Mobile doesn't Activate after 4 hours, you'll need to go the TIO to get a refund as none of the Pinoy's or Indian staff know how to fix it.

    Been at it all day today.

  • +1

    mobile providers racking their brains trying to stop people from sim hopping. HOW ABOUT YOU PROVIDE DEALS FOR LOYAL CUSTOMERS instead of incentivizing sim hopping.

  • Yep I do this for data, every month look at the cheapest deals either online or at supermarkets.

    Don't pay more than $10 month for like 30gb+ every month.

  • +3

    Got into the sim hopping scene when a friend introduced it to me about 2.5 years ago. Always kept my main number which was originally provided by Optus since early 2000, used Kogan, Telstra, Vodaphone with the majority of my time with Amaysim as they provide the cheapest solution whilst out of the country.
    Been living in SE Asia since mid 2016 and can keep my Amaysim number active as long as i have $10 PAYG credit in my account. Never had an issue with roaming on the local network and use the service mostly for verification codes. Never use the service to receive voice calls as it costs too much. Got local numbers here and any significant body such as banks are aware to only call me on my local numbers.
    When i do return to Australia a month or so in advance I'll either buy a cheap deal online and use that for data, calls and text in a dual sim phone while receiving calls and text on my original number or if my Amaysim credit is going to expire use that on a temporary prepaid plan.
    Optus prepaid was originally charging me $30 every 4 months just so i could keep my number active whilst abroad. Glad I was introduced to Amaysim. Saving me over a $100 a year.
    As for the idea of sim hopping abuse it while you can as telcos are abusing customers left right and centre with their ridiculous markups and fee structures.

  • Hey I'm about to head overseas for just over a month. I'm with telstra and have about 50gb banked. Is there a way to port to a provider with a better roaming prospect and then port back keeping my banked data?

    • I highly doubt it. You forfeit whatever is available with your current provider when you port out.

  • Tried sim hopping last year. Was with Boost which had excellent reception. Then jumped around Belong and Kogan, always get 1 - 2 bars and really unstable for online mobile gaming. Went back to Boost. If I had a more stable connection I would've kept it going, so all comes down to what's important/works for you.

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