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Say Hello To The $520 BlackBerry And The $600 iPhone

blackberry-pearl-girls.jpgWireless carriers are starting to deliver on their yearlong promises of "open access" to gadgets and mobile applications that the carriers don't sell themselves. One of the first steps: Setting prices for new service offerings, which Verizon Wireless did today.

Verizon, the second-largest U.S. carrier, is now selling "month-to-month" cellphone service plans that can be used with any cellphone that uses "CDMA" wireless technology -- without requiring subscribers to sign a 2-year contract. This is useful if you've somehow acquired a Verizon or Sprint (S) phone, want to sign up for Verizon (VZ) service, and don't want to sign a long-term contract.

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The good news: All of Verizon's voice and data plans are available on a month-to-month basis at the same price as the long-term contracts.

The bad news: If you don't already have a cellphone, and insist on signing up for a month-to-month plan, getting a new phone is going to cost you a bundle. That's because carriers usually eat much of the cost of your new phone -- via a subsidy of up to $300 -- as an incentive to get you on a long-term contract. So if you want to use month-to-month service, you'll have to pay full retail for a phone.

And that's not cheap. A LG Chocolate -- free with a 2-year Verizon Wireless contract -- will run you $300. A Palm (PALM) Centro, $99 with a 2-year deal, would cost $350. And a RIM (RIMM) BlackBerry 8830, $150 with subsidy, costs $520 for month-to-month subscribers.

(Side note: Sounds to us like an opportunity for a more robust aftermarket of lightly used CDMA phones. Good news for eBay and Craigslist?)

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Expect to pay an even steeper premium when AT&T starts selling no-contract Apple (AAPL) iPhones later this year: This summer, the carrier said an 8-gig, no-contract iPhone would cost $600, and a 16-gig will run $700 -- a $400 premium over the subsidized phones, which require a 2-year AT&T (T) contract.

See Also:
What 'Open' Verizon Means: Less Than You Think
Verizon Wireless CEO: 'Open' Access Won't Cost More
Apple Reboots Unlocked iPhone Market With $400 Premium

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