AT&T to Stop Offering Two-Year Contracts

FILE -- An exterior photograph of the AT&T building in Atlanta, Georgia.
FILE — An exterior photograph of the AT&T building in Atlanta, Georgia.

Two-year contracts appear to have finally met their demise.

AT&T has announced that it will stop offering new contracts to consumers next week. It had been the final holdout among the four national wireless carriers. Verizon and Sprint did away with contracts a few months ago, and T-Mobile killed off contracts in 2013.

Instead of signing a contract, AT&T customers buying new smartphones will have to sign up for an “AT&T Next” device payment plan, in which they pay off the cost of their phone over the course of time. AT&T will officially stop offering contracts on January 8.

AT&T customers currently under contract will be grandfathered in — until they want to buy a new phone from the company. Business customers will still be able to sign up for contracts.

The company said in a statement that the vast majority of its customers were signing up for AT&T Next plans, so ending contracts was a logical step.

The Next plans tend to be cheaper than the two-year contracts, and they offer customers perks such as no down payment and the ability to upgrade early.

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SOURCE: CNN, David Goldman