Dish completes purchase of Boost from T-Mobile

The last major step from the T-Mobile/Sprint merger has been completed.

Dish completes purchase of Boost from T-Mobile - CNET

Boost customers will still be able to keep their phone numbers and continue to have service in the same areas they have now. On Thursday Dish will introduce its first new plan, bringing back Boost’s previous “$hrink-It!” plan that starts at $45 for 15GB of data. Monthly rates drop by $5 after three on-time payments, and then by an additional $5 after six total on-time payments.

“Today, we are proud to welcome hundreds of employees, thousands of independent retailers, and millions of customers to the Dish family,” said Erik Carlson, president and CEO, Dish in a statement. “This marks an important milestone in Dish’s evolution as a connectivity company. It positions us well as we continue to build out the first virtualized, standalone 5G network in America.”

The completion of the deal is the culmination of Dish’s unlikely role as the savior of the T-Mobile-Sprint deal, which concerned regulators that the elimination of one of the national carriers would hurt consumers. As part of the DOJ-brokered deal, Dish will use T-Mobile and Sprint’s network for seven years while it builds its own nationwide 5G service, including being able to take advantage of new T-Mobile improvements such as its deployment of 5G.

New Boost users will be activated on T-Mobile’s network, allowing them to take advantage of the stronger service compared to Sprint’s network. 

T-Mobile, which in addition to Sprint also owns the Metro prepaid brand, was required to divest Boost to get government approval for the merger. 

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