You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

AT&T Will Offer Unlimited Data -- But There's a Catch Wireless subscribers who have or add DirecTV or the company's U-verse TV service to their lineup of offerings will be able to get unlimited data for their smartphone plans.

By Don Reisinger

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Reuters | Mario Anzuoni

Now that the wireless industry has turned its back on unlimited data, AT&T has found a way to bring it back.

The wireless company on Monday announced that wireless subscribers who have or add DirecTV or the company's U-verse TV service to their lineup of offerings will be able to get unlimited data for their smartphone plans. The AT&T Unlimited Plan includes unlimited data, talk and text, and will cost customers $100 per month. Additional lines will go for $40 per month, though a fourth smartphone can be added free of charge.

AT&T's announcement comes as the wireless industry tries to move customers away from unlimited data.

Unlimited data was once the standard in the wireless industry, allowing smartphone users to consume as much of the Internet as they wanted without fear of being charged an additional fee for overusage. As smartphones boomed and tablets grew in popularity, however, wireless carrier networks became overburdened by customers consuming massive amounts of data.

To address that, and as they claim, to deliver a better wireless "experience" to customers, the companies instituted tiered-based plans. Those plans force customers to pay a monthly fee for a certain amount of data. If customers go over their monthly allotment, they're charged an additional fee to use extra data.

Meanwhile, carriers have largely abandoned unlimited data and have tried to oust those who are grandfathered in to such plans. Indeed, it was AT&T in November that announced it would increase its monthly fee on grandfathered unlimited data plan holders from $30 per month to $35. Its competitors, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint, have similarly made it far less cost-effective to be an unlimited plan holder, ultimately leading to many switching to cheaper tiered data plans.

Still, the move to limit data usage has come under fire from critics who argue customers should be able to consume as much data as they'd like. Like the recent disintegration of two-year contracts, they argue that eliminating unlimited data plans is self-serving and not nearly as beneficial to consumers as the companies argue. Carriers, however, say that heavy data users are just a small fraction of their customer base and the tiered plans do not negatively impact their customers.

Regardless, unlimited data plans have been on life support for years with no signs of staging a comeback.

AT&T's decision Monday, therefore, is somewhat surprising, but perhaps illustrates why the company had interest in DirecTV in the first place. AT&T acquired DirecTV last year for $49 billion. The move was seen as a way for the wireless carrier to expand its offerings and activities to attract customers in the exceedingly competitive wireless space. Through a mix of cross-selling, some analysts said, both AT&T and DirecTV could benefit.

The unlimited plan offering is just one of those attempts. With this latest move, AT&T is effectively making the idea of switching to DirecTV more palatable for customers, and for current DirecTV subscribers to move their wireless service to AT&T. Indeed, AT&T said Monday that existing DirecTV or U-verse customers who are not yet AT&T subscribers can receive $500 in credits if they switch to the new unlimited plan and buy a smartphone from the company.

AT&T's new offer is available now. In addition to smartphones, customers who want to put a tablet on the unlimited plan can do so for $40 per month. A smartwatch will cost $10 per month.

Don Reisinger

Contributing Writer

Don Reisinger has been a contributing writer for Fortune since 2015.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Leadership

You Won't Have a Strong Leadership Presence Until You Master These 5 Attributes

If you are a poor leader internally, you will be a poor leader externally.

Business News

Samsung Makes 6 Day Workweeks Mandatory for Executives as the Company Enters 'Emergency Mode'

Samsung said its performance "fell short of expectations" last year. Now executives are required to work weekends.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

I Tried Airchat, the Hottest New Social Media App in Silicon Valley — Here's How It Works

Airchat is still invite-only and prioritizes voices with no option to upload photos or write text, making it feel more human than Facebook or Reddit.

Growing a Business

They Designed One Simple Product With a 'Focus on Human Health' — and Made $40 Million Last Year

Marilee Nelson, Allison Evans and Kelly Love founded cult-favorite cleaning brand Branch Basics in 2012.