Forum Discussion
Goodbye HughesNet Bad Last Impression
Was able to receive AT&T Fixed Wireless Internet, as part of the CAF funding for our rural area. It is fantastic- $60 a month for 170GB, and the ability to take on another 1TB in data if needed. After six years, we are streaming. Steady 40-50 mpbs with 30 latency. My speeds with HN were all over the place, despite the 25 mpbs guarantee.
Have some real issues though with HughesNet cancellation policy. They will bill you for the full month regardless of when you cancel. They will not refund any unused tokens. I have canceled several subscription services and never have paid for services not used. Leaves a bad last impression- although I have no plans on coming back. I would use Viasat at this point which has improved their pricing greatly in this area. On top of all of that, my customer service rep must have been from a foreign country; could barely understand me and I had to repeat each sentence slowly three times.
Lack of competition is really killing this part of the Internet service business. I'm hopeful for everyone out there that you'll get more choices in the future.
- GabeUDistinguished Professor IV
When a service cancellation is requested it is normally performed at the end of the current billing period. However, if immediate cancellation is requested they can immediately cancel the service and prorate the charges for that current billing period, I believe.
Unfortunately, any token purchases are non-refundable. It's treated in the same way as remaining plan data, in that it's not refunded.
Per the subscriber agreement:
6.4 UNUSED DATA TOKENS.
You agree that any Data Tokens you may have purchased, or which may been provided to you free of charge, have no intrinsic value if you are no longer a HughesNet Subscriber. Thus, any value associated with any such tokens will lapse at the time of termination of your Service.- DangerFreshman
Don't disagree that that is the exact contract language; just saying that it's not a good business practice. You paid for something you didn't use, and they keep the full value. They aren't put out financially by someone not using tokens. It's small money, and in the bigger scheme, seems cheap on their part.
As for the prorated balance, the customer service rep struggled so much to understand what I was saying that I'm not sure he would have known this to be true.
Great community on here by the way, especially you Gabe. But this business model for satellite is so fragile- this fixed wireless is a game changer if they are able to implement it with additional towers over the next few years. We've saved over $120 a month by also eliminating a landline and replacing with VOIP. We can also now consider cutting the cord on satellite TV. Rural areas deserve better, for sure.
- MarkJFineProfessor
Pretty sure the business model is there because the infrastructure costs warrant it. The fee structure is there to:
1. Ensure people think about what they're purchasing before buying.
2. Don't make rash decisions to discontinue.This is true for terrestrial services as well, but I'm sure the installation and maintenance costs for satellite services vastly outweigh that of terrestrial.
You may not like it from a customer standpoint, but it makes a lot of sense from a business standpoint.
BTW: The above conditions do include expectations-setting. The corporate-level admins on this board go through great pains to rectify anything a salesman said that was problmatic.
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