In a significant move aimed at protecting mobile prepaid consumers, the Government of India and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of india (TRAI) are pushing telecom operators to shift away from the long‑standing industry practice of offering 28‑day “monthly” recharge plans and instead promote plans with 30‑day validity.
This change, backed by officials and parliamentary concerns, is intended to help users avoid paying for 13 recharges in a calendar year and align telecom billing more closely with actual months.
📌 Why 28‑Day Plans Are Being Questioned
For over a decade, major telecom companies in india — including Jio, Airtel, and Vi — have offered so‑called “monthly” plans with 28‑day validity. Because a year has 365 days, not 336 (12 × 28), users end up having to recharge 13 times a year instead of 12 — effectively paying for an extra month of service.
This has drawn strong criticism:
- Lawmakers and consumer advocates have called the practice unfair to subscribers, saying it increases their annual telecom costs.
- In Parliament, MPs like Raghav Chadha pointed out that the current cycle misleads users and pushes them into unnecessary extra recharges.
📶 What the government and TRAI Are Doing
📅 1. Inclusion of 30‑Day Plans Is Now Mandatory
The government has reinforced that telecom companies must include 30‑day validity plans in their prepaid offerings — not just 28‑day plans. TRAI had earlier mandated that operators provide at least one 30‑day plan voucher, special tariff voucher, and combo voucher.
Communications minister Jyotiraditya Scindia has reiterated that telcos should actively promote these 30‑day plans so consumers are fully aware of alternatives to 28‑day plans.
📈 2. Greater Transparency for Consumers
Officials say the push for 30‑day plans is designed to:
- Ensure plans align with calendar months, making billing cycles fairer and easier for consumers to understand.
- Reduce the number of annual recharges for users, saving them extra spending.
- Improve consumer awareness of plan choices rather than letting 28‑day plans dominate the market.
📊 What This Means for mobile Users
Here’s what subscribers can expect moving forward:
- Operators must offer true 30‑day prepaid plans across categories (voice, data, combo).
- The current 28‑day plans may still exist but will be less emphasised in marketing and billing structures.
- Customers may benefit from fewer recharge cycles over a year — potentially one less recharge annually if they switch to 30‑day plans.
While the government hasn’t banned 28‑day plans outright, the push and regulatory pressure is clear — aiming for a fairer, more transparent billing system for all indian mobile subscribers.
📍 In Summary
The longstanding practice of offering “monthly” prepaid plans with 28‑day validity — resulting in 13 recharges per year — has come under scrutiny. In response, the government and telecom regulator are encouraging telecom operators to standardise and promote 30‑day validity recharges so that users pay for services more in line with calendar months, enhancing fairness and clarity in prepaid billing.
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