Free Government Cell Phones: Carriers

The carriers below all offer cell phones and plans via the Lifelink program. Some are more well known than others; Q Link, Safelink, and Assurance (backed by Virgin Mobile) are three of the bigger ones. 

Note that each carrier serves specific states; for more information on which states each is available in, check out this page. 

  • Assist Wireless
  • Assurance Wireless
  • Cintex Wireless
  • Copper Valley Wireless
  • Easy Wireless
  • enTouch Wireless
  • FeelSafe Wireless
  • GCI
  • Infiniti Mobile
  • Life Wireless
  • NewPhone Wireless
  • Q Link
  • Safelink Wireless
  • SafetyNet Wireless
  • Sprocket Wireless
  • StandUp Wireless
  • Tag Mobile
  • Tempo Communications
  • Terracom Wireless
  • TruConnect
  • True Wireless

Free Government Cell Phones: Which Phones You Can Get


The various carriers that participate in the Lifeline Assistance program do a pretty good job of giving their customers some great options in terms of cheap or free phones. 

Take Assurance: the carrier offers a host of smartphones like the Alcatel Dawn, Kyocrea Hydro Reach and ZTE Prestige 2. Or Truconnect: they sell the NUU A3 and ZTE Warp Elite N9518. 

Unfortunately some of these carriers aren’t very forthcoming with their phone lineups until after you go through the qualification process. However, doing so will help you determine what kind of stipend you’re working with for your free or cheap government phone. 

Free Government Cell Phones: Low-Cost Alternatives


Fail to qualify for Lifeline? Fear not, there are a host of low-cost prepaid carriers that offer dirt cheap cell phone service, and cheap or free phones. Here are a few. 

Gen Mobile 

Gen Mobile is a new-ish carrier that runs on Sprint’s network.Plans start at $5/month and top out at $25/month, with varying amounts of talk, text and data. This plan gives you 300 minutes and a gig of data for a mere $10/month, not far from the monthly rate you’d pay through Lifeline. 

Gen Mobile sells pre-owned devices. You can get a Samsung flip phone for $19, or an iPhone 4s for just $39.00. Not free, but cheap. 

Twigby

Twigby is a Nashville-based prepaid mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) that operates on Sprint and Verizon’s networks. The carrier offers plans in 3 or 6 month blocks, and cheap prices. This plan is a couple bucks more expensive than the Gen Mobile plan but includes 200 more minutes a month. 

Twigby sells tons of cheap phones, the least expensive of which is the Alcatel Cinch at $15 outright. If you want a device that more closely resembles today’s smartphones, the Unimax Express is $34. 

FreeUP

FreeUP offers unrestricted 4G LTE cell service on America’s “top GSM network,” i.e AT&T. Their plans are cheap—they’ve even got a free one—and you can make them cheaper by participating in the carrier’s rewards program (by doing stuff like taking surveys, downloading coupons, etc.). 

This plan comes in at just $20/month, pretty incredible for an unlimited talk and text plan that also includes 2GB of data. 

FreeUP’s phones are a bit more expensive than those already mentioned, but you can still get a great smartphone for not a lot of money. Exhibit a: the ZTE Avid Trio for $54. 

Source: Whistleout