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What are Anytime Minutes?

Tricia Christensen
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Updated: May 16, 2024
Views: 45,606
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Anytime minutes are minutes on a cell phone that can be used during a specific time period each day, and they are essentially the minutes the person pays for each month. They usually refer to minutes that are used between the hours of 7 AM to 9 PM in many plans, or a slight variation on these hours. In plans, where people are allotted a certain amount of minutes, using the phone during these hours will use up the minutes. Many cell phone companies now offer free nights and weekends, which means that, if people call outside the standard weekday hours, the phone use won’t affect the number of minutes still available.

These minutes may also not apply when a person has a shared calling plan, special numbers he can call for free, or a variety of other arrangements. For example, some companies offer free calls between family members. This means that, even if a person calls a specified family member during the day, the number of minutes on his plan does not go down, so if he restricts his calls, he has less chance of being charged extra for more minutes than the plan allows.

The standard structure of early cell phone plans virtually always included anytime minutes, in amounts a customer could pre-order. Depending on how much the person used his cell phone during the day on weekdays, he would try to hazard a guess at how many minutes he might need in a given month. Exceeding that limit was often very costly, with extensive charges for going over the limit. Since phone bills that exceeded anytime limits shocked people, many phone plans now offer more modest charges for going over.

Other plans have skirted the issue of anytime minutes entirely. Some companies now offer flat fee wireless or cellular service, for example, and others offer prepaid cell phones. This keeps track of exactly how much the person is using his cell phone, and simply stops providing service if he doesn’t purchase more minutes.

Anytime minutes can also be called whenever minutes or service minutes. It’s a clever marketing strategy to refer to the minutes as anytime, since really, these are the minutes the customer pays for. Naturally, he can use them anytime in the specified period, but it’s still usually a better deal to use the phone during evening and weekend hours.

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Tricia Christensen
By Tricia Christensen
With a Literature degree from Sonoma State University and years of experience as a EasyTechJunkie contributor, Tricia Christensen is based in Northern California and brings a wealth of knowledge and passion to her writing. Her wide-ranging interests include reading, writing, medicine, art, film, history, politics, ethics, and religion, all of which she incorporates into her informative articles. Tricia is currently working on her first novel.
Discussion Comments
By ButterPecan — On Feb 13, 2013

I just discovered that my mobile-phone carrier considers the beginning of the call as the time for the whole call. So if you initiate a call at 6:59 p.m. and your unlimited "nights and weekends" minutes start at 7:00 p.m. then that entire call will count toward your "anytime minutes" and not to your "nights and weekend" minutes.

Tricia Christensen
Tricia Christensen
With a Literature degree from Sonoma State University and years of experience as a EasyTechJunkie contributor, Tricia...
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