Skip to main content

Jio new recharge plans

Reliance Jio's Recharge Offers Of Rs 19, 52, Rs 98, Rs 149 Explained

Reliance Jio 

Reliance Jio's Recharge Offers Of Rs 19, 52, Rs 98, Rs 149 Explained
.Story Highlights
  • Despite a hike in tariffs, analysts said Jio's prices remain low
  • Jio is offering a range of data plans to suit varying needs of customers
  • To lure users, telecom firm are coming up with new data and calling plans
Reliance Jio, the latest entrant in the country's telecom sector, hiked its tariffs recently. Analysts said Jio's prices remain low, although they welcomed the hikes as a good initial signal of more pricing discipline, news agency Reuters reported. "Jio's announcement (of price hike) was a huge relief for all incumbent players as there is a feeling that the worst of pricing is behind them. My guess is that from now on, they will focus on quality of network to get more customers, " said Satish Betadpur, director of research at William O'Neil & Co.

Here's a look at what Reliance Jio offers under its recharge packs priced at Rs 19, 52, Rs 98 and Rs 149


Reliance Jio Rs 19 plan


This Jio plan, which is valid only for a day, offers 0.15 GB of high speed data. Local, STD and roaming calls are free and unlimited to all operators. Only 20 SMSes (short message service) are allowed.

Reliance Jio Rs 52 plan


Jio introduced the Rs 52 plan ahead of Diwali 2017. The Rs 52 plan - valid for seven days -offers the benefit of unlimited data and calls during the validity period, according to Jio's website. Local, STD and roaming calls to all operators are free of charge under Jio's Rs 52 plan. Jio offers high speed data of 1.05 GB (gigabytes), with a daily limit of 0.15 GB, according to the Jio website - jio.com. After a customer uses the 1.05 GB high speed data during the validity period, the internet speed is reduced to 64 Kbps under the Rs 52 pack, the website noted. Free SMSes are capped at 70 for the validity period of seven days.

Reliance Jio Rs 98 plan


This Rs 98 plan was also introduced by Jio ahead of Diwali 2017. Jio's Rs 98 pack comes with a validity period of 14 days. Local, STD and roaming calls to all operators are free of charge under Jio's Rs 98 plan. High speed data offered under Jio's Rs 98 plan is limited to 2.1 GBs, with a daily limit of 0.15 GB, according to the Jio website. The internet speed will be reduced to 64 Kbps after exhaustion of the 2.1 GBs offered under Jio's Rs 98 pack. The maximum number of free SMSes allowed under Jio's Rs 98 plan is 140, it noted.


Reliance Jio Rs 149 plan


Reliance Jio's 149 plan comes with a validity of 28 days. Jio customers purchasing the Rs 149 pack will get the benefit of unlimited voice calls on local and STD networks. Jio's Rs 149 plan comes with high speed data of 4.2 GBs with a daily limit of 0.15 GB. After exhaustion of 4.2 GBs of high speed data offered under the RS 149 plan, the internet speed is reduce to 64 Kbps, according to the Jio website. The Rs 149 pack includes 300 free SMSes during the validity period

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Bill Gates says coding is easy check out

Billgates In 1975, Gates and Allen launched Microsoft, which became the world's largest  PC  software company. During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of  chairman ,  CEO and  chief software architect , while also being the largest individual  shareholder  until May 2014. Gates stepped down as chief executive officer of Microsoft in January 2000, but he remained as chairman and created the position of chief software architect for himself. In June 2006, Gates announced that he would be transitioning from full-time work at Microsoft to part-time work and full-time work at the  Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation . He gradually transferred his duties to  Ray Ozzie  and  Craig Mundie . He stepped down as chairman of Microsoft in February 2014 and assumed a new post as technology adviser to support the newly appointed CEO  Satya Nadella .

The biggest deal in health care industry

What the CVS-Aetna deal means for the future of health care When drug company chief executive Heather Bresch was hauled in front of Congress last year to defend the high price of lifesaving EpiPens, she drew skeptical lawmakers' attention to a large poster board that blamed the skyrocketing price tag on a coterie of drug supply chain middlemen. Of EpiPen's $608 list price, her company, Mylan, received only $274, Bresch said. "What the patient is paying is not . . . coming back to Mylan," Bresch said. "And when we were speaking earlier of the people, the middlemen in the system, that's either the pharmacy benefit managers, retailers, wholesalers, insurers." That supply chain — rarely seen by most consumers — is the center of attention in the corporate world after CVS Health announced a $69 billion deal to buy Aetna, the nation's third-largest insurer. Familiar as a corner drugstore, CVS Health actually makes most of its money from one of t

H-1B extension is now more difficult trump tightened walls again

Trump admin makes it more difficult for H-1B visa extension USCIS said the previous memorandum of April 23, 2004 appeared to place this burden on this federal agency. In a new directive, the Trump administration has made it more difficult for the renewal of non-immigrant visas such as H-1B and L1, popular among Indian IT professionals, saying that the burden of proof lies on the applicant even when an extension is sought.  Rescinding its more than 13-year-old policy, the  US Citizenship and Immigration Services  (  USCIS ) said that the burden of proof in establishing eligibility is, at all times, on the petitioner.  USCIS said the previous memorandum of April 23, 2004 appeared to place this burden on this federal agency.  "This memorandum makes it clear that the burden of proof remains on the petitioner, even where an extension of non- immigrant status is sought," USCIS said in its latest memorandum issued on October 23.   Under the previous policy, i