For the interested, they say there are no data caps at all in the FAQ located : Here. [t-mobile.com]
The only limitation seems to be this verbiage:
You can use your Home Internet for all the homework, streaming, and video conferencing you need! But to ensure that our network is available for all customers, there are some restrictions on activities that can damage or disproportionately congest the network. For example, Home Internet is not intended for unattended use, automatic data feeds, automated machine-to-machine connections, or uses that automatically consume unreasonable amounts of available network capacity. Please see T-Mobile's Terms and Conditions for prohibited uses
They also offer one tier at whatever speed the network will do, with a minimum of 50mbps download. No upload speeds mentioned. Only at select addresses (presumably where there are no alternatives).
They're talking about roaming, not what you're connecting to over the Internet. If your device spends the majority of its air-time on other cellular networks then you probably shouldn't be a T-Mobile subscriber.
There is "no data cap", but you do get "deprioritized during times of congestion" after 50GB (this number may have changed).
In practice this means that every now and again I am on an even footing with MVNOs, but 95% of the time I still get my 50/25 speeds (LTE at my house).
I'm loathe to call it not a cap, but they don't charge extra, and they don't slow me down the vast majority of the time, so it's only a vaguely misleading (compared to my experience with other networks
But then later in the FAQ -
"You can use your Home Internet for all the homework, streaming, and video conferencing you need! But to ensure that our network is available for all customers, there are some restrictions on activities that can damage or disproportionately congest the network. For example, Home Internet is not intended for unattended use, automatic data feeds, automated machine-to-machine connections, or uses that automatically consume unreasonable amounts of available network capacity. Please
The only limitation seems to be this verbiage:
You can use your Home Internet for all the homework, streaming, and video conferencing you need! But to ensure that our network is available for all customers, there are some restrictions on activities that can damage or disproportionately congest the network. For example, Home Internet is not intended for unattended use, automatic data feeds, automated machine-to-machine connections, or uses that automatically consume unreasonable amounts of available network capacity. Please see T-Mobile's Terms and Conditions for prohibited uses
They also offer one tier at whatever speed the network will do, with a minimum of 50mbps download. No upload speeds mentioned. Only at select addresses (presumably where there are no alternatives).
They're talking about roaming, not what you're connecting to over the Internet. If your device spends the majority of its air-time on other cellular networks then you probably shouldn't be a T-Mobile subscriber.
As a current post-paid tmobile user.
There is "no data cap", but you do get "deprioritized during times of congestion" after 50GB (this number may have changed).
In practice this means that every now and again I am on an even footing with MVNOs, but 95% of the time I still get my 50/25 speeds (LTE at my house).
I'm loathe to call it not a cap, but they don't charge extra, and they don't slow me down the vast majority of the time, so it's only a vaguely misleading (compared to my experience with other networks
I whent straight to the actual source https://www.t-mobile.com/isp/p... [t-mobile.com] and they claim no data caps