Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.

By | June 14, 2011, 5:04am PDT

Summary: Want a GSM iPhone but hate AT&T? Now you can buy an unlocked phone from Apple for $649, and get it to work with any carrier’s microSIM card.

Apple on Tuesday began to sell unlocked iPhone 4 GSM models to customers in the United States from its online store. The phones cost $649 for a 16GB model, $749 for a 32GB model. Black or white models are available.

“Unlocked” iPhone 4s arrive without an active micro-SIM card in place. Customers must first obtain a micro-SIM card from a supported GSM wireless carrier before the phone will work.

The unlocked iPhone could also work on T-Mobile’s U.S. network, which operates using GSM like AT&T. But because of differences between the carrier’s networks, an iPhone 4 operating on T-Mobile’s network will only work using slower EDGE data technology, rather than at 3G speeds.

This new unlocked phone is primarily useful for U.S. iPhone customers traveling internationally who want to use local carriers rather than incurring “roaming” fees from AT&T.

Unlocked GSM iPhones are a great deal more expesnive than phones purchased through AT&T. Buying a GSM phone through AT&T costs $199 for a 16GB model, $299 for a 32GB model. But doing so also requires the customer to agree to a two-year contract that incurs large fees if the customer terminates the contract early.

Customers in many other countries have been able to purchase unlocked iPhones, in many cases, depending on the law, right from the start. But unlocked phones are still something of a rarity in the United States, where cell phone carriers exercise much tighter control over how cell phones are sold and distributed.

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A long-time veteran of the Apple news business, Peter has also spent more than fifteen years covering games and the game industry. A self-proclaimed Alpha Nerd, Peter also professes a love for anime, sci-fi cons, gadgets of all kinds and various geek subcultures.

Disclosure

Peter Cohen

Peter Cohen does not own any stock or have any investments in any of the companies he writes about.

Biography

Peter Cohen

A resident of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Peter has spent more than fifteen years writing about games and the game industry. For a decade Peter was senior editor for Macworld magazine, writing online news and covering the Apple game beat in Macworld's Game Room column.

Peter is currently executive editor for The Loop, an Apple news and analysis site founded by former Macworld editors. He's cohost of Angry Mac Bastards, a weekly podcast that viciously eviscerates some of what passes for Apple-related news and analysis in the tech blogosphere.

Peter is also a freelance technology journalist and reviewer whose words can be found in Macworld, Mac|Life, MacUser, MacFormat and Tap! Magazine.

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RE: Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.
FAULKNE 13th Oct
Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.
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I don't think that the fact that the iPhone is locked stopped anyone from buying it

and the people who had a problem with that, already jailbroke/unlocked the phone
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Anyone know if they will work in EU ?
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@MorbusB Certainly. You'll need a microSIM card from a local carrier, of course, but these GSM phones are the same "world phones" that AT&T sells, just without a carrier lock or microSIM card.
@MorbusB
Yes, because the iPhone sold in Europe is basically the same sold in USA except in Europe the iPhone is Unlocked due to EU law!
Too bad America doesn't have same law banning locking phones!!!!
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RE: Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.
LoverockDavidson 14th Jun
Isn't that more than what the first gen iPhones sold for originally?
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@LoverockDavidson It's a bit more. The original iPhone cost $499 for a 4GB version, $599 for an 8GB version.
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@flargh Still cheaper than a Motorola "Q", tho? grin
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Sadly
Hasam1991 14th Jun
Sadly, they sell for far more on Ebay... the iPhone is hot! even the antenna issues coudn't stop it.
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That does not seem sad at all....
James Quinn 14th Jun
@Hasam1991
All it means is the "antenna issue" was in fact not an issue.

Pagan jim
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@James Quinn

Actually all it means is that Apple people will buy pretty much anything with an Apple logo on it....
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@Doctor Demento

And you'll believe anything the media tells you.
@James Quinn , "the antenna issue" was a genuine issue, in fact. Why would Apple admit that they were developing a work-around for the antenna issue if it wasn't a genuine issue?
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Message has been deleted.
DeusXMachina Updated - 15th Jun
  • Flagged
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@Doctor Demento
1) The majority of iPhone Owners are Windows users
2) you are an idiot.
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There are very few GSM carriers and when AT&T takes over T-Mobile there will be even less. So what's the use?
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@rdw551 Ah no. There are very few CDMA carriers. The rest of the world is GSM.
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@LarsDennert He probably meant in the US....
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@LarsDennert
The rest of the world is NOT GSM. Tell that to Korea (or any of the other CDMA countries)

P.S. CDMA is technically superior.
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@rdw551 - Not only that, but T-M really sux at data as well.... Can not see any advantage for a costly unit to try & access sucky data streams... The EDGE is the most sucky of all - I can state from experience. Data rates comparable to dial-up. Just don't go there if you care about your money and time.
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RE: Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.
Pratik.luhadiya@... 14th Jun
Expensive is spelled wrong. But yea, I'd rather get it unlocked for Free-99 by jailbreaking it...
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@Pratik.luhadiya@...
"Yeah" is spelled wrong. But yeah, jailbreaking does not unlock it. Those are two different things.
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FCC Should Step In
csarahan@... Updated - 14th Jun
The Federal Government should require carriers to quit subsidizing phones through two year contracts. We should be like the rest of the world where phones and carriers are interchangable.
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@csarahan@...

Yes because we all know that the government doesn't have enough power, they should definitely be telling every company in America how to do business, after all everyone knows that government knows best!
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@Doctor Demento,

You almost have a monopoly of two firms in the field. The feds should be forcing this issue to separate the purchase of the phone from the service.
@csarahan@... uh NO. That's not in the FCC's purview to define the cellular business model - its (wait for it) the consumer. Once people wake up and realize that there is a financial gain on most carriers (VZW excluded - they charge more by being off contract from the start) not getting the "free" phone and pay a decent amount for it things will change - until then, we are stuck in the inferior subsidized model.
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RE: Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.
bobby.kurtz@... 14th Jun
"But unlocked phones are still something of a rarity in the United States" That is not the most accurate statement there. The first Android phone, the Tmobile G1 was the first phone I bought that was not unlocked in 10 years. I only bought Europe spec Nokia smart phones before this and I could get them for very cheap compared to now(sub $200). When the 3g bands became different, the market for unlocked phones killed itself- at least for US consumers, unless you do not care about 3g.
It's about bloody time! The US has been behind the rest of the world offering factory unlocked mobile phones. I travel to Europe and the Middle East often and had to purchase a Factory unlocked iPhone 4 outside the United States at a hefty price without a US warranty. I don't want the hassle of trying to use a Jailbroken iPhone on international carriers along with firmware upgrade problems. I'll likely buy another for traveling family members.
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I don't think it matters because if AT&T acquires T-mobile you won't have another GSM provider to choose... The only thing you'll gain is the ability to take the unlocked iPhones overseas.
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@snoop0x7b

There are literally dozens of regional GSM carriers in the United States....
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YES!!!
pwatson 14th Jun
This is exactly the right direction. I was thinking it would be Google, but it may turn out to be Apple that could break the headlock of the carrier/manufacturer collusion. Although, that doesn't sound like something Apple would do.

Still no hope for Verizon customers on CDMA.
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@pwatson
I believe the current Verizon iPhone already has the mythical GSM/CDMA chip. The GSM simply hasn't been activated. (Wonder if Verizon knows that?)

Hopefully, the next iPhone--and most new smartphones in the next year--will have the Dualchip option. That would break the telcos ridiculous lock-in in the U.S. as much as anything.
The variety of protocols in the U.S. has emasculated the U.S. telcos in the rest of the world, even though they think it helps them "lock in" customers here.
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@pwatson The Nexus One was available unlocked....
They say --> an iPhone 4 operating on T-Mobile?s network will only work using slower EDGE data technology, rather than at 3G speeds.

hahahah what a joke and total waste of time getting this unlocked if it will run in a slowwwwwwwwwwwwwwww speed and not use 3G speed.

This is why iphone is just all hype and total a useless phone. i rather get an android or an windows phone 7 phone instead.
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Only one man/woman's opinion.
James Quinn 14th Jun
@ipadsucks
Hardly a concern for Apple:) As the saying goes "You can't please everyone" nor do I think should one try. Besides check out this guys/gals name and post history it speaks for itself:P

Pagan jim
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@ipadsucks
T-Mobile's 3G and at&t's 3G networks operate on different frequencies, this is not due to choice but due to FCC requirements.....exactly how many frequencies should Apple be supporting? A few dozen to make sure it will work on all the small local and regional carriers in the world? You have any idea how much a Duodecaband phone would cost?
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@Doctor Demento
There are 5 bands for 3G- 850, 900, 1700, 1900 & 2100, not dozens. And most high end Nokias are penta-band. So its possible to make to phone to operate on all the frequencies.
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@Doctor Demento
There are 5 bands for 3G- 850, 900, 1700, 1900 & 2100, not dozens. And most high end Nokias are penta-band. So its possible to make to phone to operate on all the frequencies.
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@Doctor Demento Missed one: 1800MHz. The 2G frequencies are 850MHz and 1900MHz for the USA.... Verizon and AT&T have slots at both, T-Mobile and Sprint have slots only at 1900MHz... this is why Verizon and AT&T have such an advantage in rural areas. For Europe, the standards are 900MHz and 1800MHz for 2G. Other countries run GSM on 380MHz, 410MHz, 450MHz, 480MHz, 710MHz, 750MHz, and 810MHz. Great thing it's a standard happy

Moving to 3G, CDMA only requires 2.5MHz of bandwidth, same as 2G, so Verizon and Sprint use the same frequencies. GSM companies use HSPA, which requires 10MHz for a 3G link. AT&T uses both 850MHz and 1900MHz in the US, so they were good. T-Mobile needed more bandwidth, and bought the 1700/2100MHz slots they use for HSPA and HSPA+. Some places in Europe do 3G at 1700/1800MHz, some at 1900/2100MHz. Several others are in use, 1500MHz in Japan, for example.

For 4G, Sprint is doing WiMax at 2500MHz. Verizon has LTE on 700MHz, AT&T will eventually, too... actually extending the rural advantage they hold over Sprint, once they all get around to supporting rural areas in 2013. Europe is doing LTE at various frequencies, including 2600MHz... also very bad at passing through foliage.
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@ipadsucks

How does a carrier locked Android phone help? Idiot.
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Can't you buy unlocked phones if you want to from any reseller, right? Also why would you waste the money on a phone that will be out of date soon? Wouldn't it be right to just wait..
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@QuietStormX

In what way will it be "out of date"?
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AT&T should be forced to unlock the phone when the contract expires. They already do that for every other phone besides iPhones.
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@mykslb

The inability to unlock the at&t iPhone is a restriction imposed by Apple...not by at&t....but now that unlocked iPhones are available perhaps Apple will be a little more flexible with the iPhone 5.
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Selling Unlocked iPhones does what? It still only works properly on like 1 US carrier.
@Jimster480

It works with two out of four US National cellphone carriers, not "like 1 US carrier". More importantly, it is worldwide capable and that's the market it is aiming for. If you never leave the USA, then you might like not buy one of these because you would like be wasting your money.
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last year when travelling in Europe, I dicovered that by law, the carriers can not sell locked phones so the iPhones over there were all unlocked. This practice of locking phones to one carrier is protectionist and sucks. Who needs the hassle of goofing around with flaky unlock-hack software.....
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RE: Apple sells unlocked iPhones in U.S.
sinbadsailor@... 14th Jun
What! Way too expensive. We have biz phones and buy cheap LP full screens from the Shack. Have pcs for email and spend time visiting people (sex is much better in person, anyway). Who needs all those apps? You can only use one hunk of toliet paper at a time anyway!!!
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its ridiculous to claim that AT&T sells them for 'only' $199-299.
that is false, or at the very least, a twist on the truth.
AT&T prices the iPhone the same, around $650. you do mention the 2 year contract, but your statement makes it sound like $650 is way too much. its the same as it is with any other phone, or smartphone. buying an unlocked version has always been more expensive. thats because your 2 year commitment is worth a few hundred dollars at least to the phone companies. you pay back that discount several times over. if the untethered price seems like too much, its simply because you had no sense of how much the phone is worth.
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USA, welcome to the 20th century.

Now you can join the rest of the world in the 21st.

It's amazing that all the technical innovation originate in the US but the business/politics is so stifling.
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@DeusXMachina
bburgess66 14th Jun
1) Poor Baby
2) Boo Hoo
0 Votes
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Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.

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