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Verizon Wireless Bills Mystery $1.99 ‘Data Charge’ — Get Your Money Back

Phillip Dampier September 8, 2009 Data Caps, Video, Wireless Broadband 11 Comments

199It’s bad enough when service providers overcharge us for service we use, but it’s even worse when they bill you for services you don’t.

Verizon Wireless may be looking at millions of dollars in refunds for customers who got dinged $1.99 monthly fees on their Verizon Wireless bills labeled mysteriously as “Usage Charges, Data.”

Two dollars on a phone bill that typically exceeds $50 or more is likely to be missed by a lot of consumers skimming the fees, surcharges, taxes and other impenetrable charges that get tacked on to your monthly service.  Even worse, since Verizon charges a fee for a printed bill, most customers never even bother to look at the electronic online bill beyond the general e-mail notification received each month letting you know it has arrived.  But some Cleveland-area residents did bother to take a look, and they didn’t like what they saw:

The Money Matters column chronicled the writer’s six-month ordeal with $1.99-per-month data charges and the possible causes given by Verizon’s customer service workers. All, it turned out, were wrong or only partly true.

More than 400 Plain Dealer readers responded to the newspaper with complaints similar to the ones in the column. The readers collectively pay for more than 1,000 phone lines. In addition, calls to customer service and visits to Verizon stores increased noticeably after the column.

Take a look at your bill

Where to look for the data usage charge: The first page of your bill should have a section labeled “Quick Bill Summary.” Look under the summary for “Usage Charges, Data.”

What to do if you spot an error
Call Verizon customer service (800-922-0204) or visit a full-service store to investigate the charges and ask for a credit.

If Internet usage is the issue, ask technical support to track down the Web sites visited, and dates and times.

If premium text messages are the issue, determine whether you have applications that are downloading information automatically. Go to your “menu,” then click “media center.” You may need Verizon’s help determining what applications cost money.

You can block features you don’t use and don’t want to be charged for by accident, such as Internet access or the weather forecast. Access your account online, call customer service or visit a store.

At a minimum, thousands of customers apparently have been charged $1.99 per month for Internet “data usage” even though they had not tried to go online. In some cases, customers were charged when their phones were off, the batteries were dead, the phone’s Internet access was blocked or even when the phones didn’t have the software to go online.

One clue might be customers who inadvertently accessed the Internet browser just for a few seconds by mistakenly pressing the wrong keys on the phone.  Even a momentary activation of a Mobile Web service could generate the access fee, even if you hit the “end” key on the phone within seconds.

Frustrated customers catching the charge on their bills each month then have to pursue the ordeal of contacting customer service to have the charge removed, and frequently run into misinformed customer service representatives who argue the fees are valid for services customers don’t even have, or are offered free of charge by Verizon Wireless.

Some readers say they’ve been battling the charges for more than a year. Most said they’re tired of calling Verizon month after month. Some were irate because they’d punished their children because they wrongly believed the kids had gone on the Internet. One reader said his mom’s phone was charged for Internet access – weeks after the mother had died and her phone sat idle in her empty home.

Karen Fullerman of Twinsburg is typical of customers who complained to The Plain Dealer last week.

Fullerman has three phone lines; two are for her 23-year-old twin daughters. Fullerman has been charged $1.99 on one or two phones every month. And sometimes there’s an extra $9.99 download fee. Fullerman, who recently lost her job, said every dollar counts these days.

She insists that none of the three has gone on the Internet. And she said Verizon has told her repeatedly that the company has blocked the phones’ ability to go on the Internet – yet the Internet charges continue.

The same is true for James Grega of Brunswick, whose four phone lines with Verizon have been getting charged sporadically for about four months.

“The phones are still being charged after I had them blocked,” Grega said. “Their assurance that the $1.99 charges would stop has been a joke.”

Now, some customers who have repeatedly been credited for erroneous charges are being denied for future requests, and that is partly what prompted The Plain Dealer to get involved.

Verizon Wireless claims to be investigating the problem and promises customers full credit, assuming they specifically request it.  Therein lies a major problem for consumers, one that benefits providers with billing problems.  Consumers frustrated by long hold times or the aggravation of requesting credits may forego doing so, providing a windfall for the service provider based on a billing error.

Roger Tang, a regional vice president for Verizon, told The Plain Dealer it would resolve accidental web browser access when consumers hit the wrong buttons on their phones.  The default home page for most Verizon phones is Verizon’s own web page.  The company will make visits to that page exempt from Internet time charges “as soon as possible.”

[flv width=”320″ height=”240″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WMAR Baltimore Verizon Wireless 199 Mystery Fee 9-8-09.flv[/flv]

WMAR Baltimore ran a Scam Alert on Verizon Wireless Overcharging (9/8/09)

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SAL-e
SAL-e
14 years ago

I think there is very easy solution to this problem. Every company imposes penalties if the consumer pays his/her bill late. I believe that companies should pay customer exactly the same amount every time they make a billing error.

jr
jr
14 years ago

Graft is a way of life with the phone and cable companies

me
me
14 years ago

I have this charge on my lines. Keep in mind this charge also includes text messages. In my case .20 cents a crack. Even if you send or recv them you get charged.

They have a 5 dollar 250 messages per month plan. So if you go over 25 messages it is cheaper to get the 250 message plan.

They should break it out. Lumping it under data … sigh…

It is also worth going online to see exactly what services are tied to each line.

Cheryl Carstens
Cheryl Carstens
14 years ago

They do it all the time until you file a complaint with the FCC. The minute they were contacted by the FCC I have been charge free for 3 months.

They also tell you at their stores the phones cost one price but if you put it on your bill instead of paying right there the price of the phone doubles!!

renay
renay
14 years ago

my verizon cellphone bill is up to $900.00 do to data charges.I was a qwest cellphone user,but had no choice but to switch cause qwest merged with verizon.I also punished my son for these charges.He stoped using his phone and he is in school all day. But the charges keep coming.Dont know what to do.

Cassie
Cassie
14 years ago

We were just charged a bill of 17,358 dollars when our bill is usually 170. and they are charges for data usage we have not used. First time calling verizon they said they are valid and would give us 25% off! haha Later in the day called verizon tech support and they are investigating now.

Kirk
Kirk
14 years ago

Verizon needs to be stopped. They have thousands and thousands of Better Business Bureau complaints against them. They are a far greater monopoly then AT&T ever was. There is no reason for these silly 5GB broadband caps as they weren’t losing money before imposing monthly usage caps. Verizon has a bad history of bogus add on charges or incorrectly reporting data usage. These wireless companies are raking our nation over the coals. If i ever got a bill for 17,000 dollars right or wrong we will be in court and it will cost them much more then there inablity to… Read more »

Cassie
Cassie
14 years ago

It is very intestering we are not the only ones. We need to tell the news so people know about this. They are still investigating our case but whatever the outcome we’re going to our news and the FCC. Renay, do you live on the east coast by any chance? because that is where my mother lives, the phone that has the data charges that are wrong, and these charges are around the time the big northeaster hit and we were just trying to figure out if maybe that could be a cause. I dont think it is though, I… Read more »

Zdena Nemeckova
Zdena Nemeckova
14 years ago

Verizon may be claiming that they are investigating and offering full refunds for anyone who complains, but they lie. I have had a few mysterious data usage charges on past bills, and my latest bill shows that I used two megabytes. I spoke to a customer service representative and to a supervisor today , and was told that I had obviously used the megabytes and that they could do nothing to refund the charges. I know for certain that I did not access anything. So far , we are only talking about $3.98 during the past month, and a few… Read more »

R Carry
R Carry
13 years ago

On March 31st, Verizon AUTOMATICALLY changed my account to “unlimited” from 1400 minutes, and billed an additional $200.00! They (CS on the phone & the manager at a “genuine” Verizon store) were unable to tell me who or what changed my account; IT JUST HAPPENED! HOW MANY OTHER PEOPLE DID THAT HAPPEN TO, AND WAS IT AN INTENTIONAL PLOY TO MAKE BILLABLE LEVELS HIGHER FOR STOCK MANIPULATION? Also, the week before, my web access was not available. I have a “new” (reconditioned 5th or 6th replacement) Treo 700P. I use the IR for Real Estate lockboxes. When I activated it,… Read more »

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