Published February 05, 2015
Those monthly love letters from the cable company are full of jargon, charges, and fees that are mystifying—even to us, and we write about this stuff all the time! To help you make sense of your triple-play bill, we created a composite bill that lists the charges found on most cable, satellite, and phone-company bills. Here's what it means, along with tips on where you might be able to save money.
These vary by state and might be different for a cable company versus a telecom provider such as Verizon FiOS. There's not much you can do about these charges. The providers are allowed to pass along 911/E-911 fees for phones as well as their mandatory "contributions" to the Federal Universal Service Fund (which makes phone and Internet services available to all consumers), so you ultimately foot the bill.
For more tips on lowering your bill, see our story on how to save money on triple-play cable services.
This is a relatively new charge of a few bucks a month that's been tacked on by many TV providers. Cable companies claim that they can’t keep up with the rising costs of sports networks such as MASN in the Washington, D.C., area, MSG in the New York metropolitan region, and SportsNet LA in Los Angeles. So what do they do? Pass it on to you, whether you watch sports or not. The only way around it is to switch to a basic or economy sports-free package, which might not include this charge.
Fold broadband into a triple play and the price is reasonable, but subscribe only to the Internet service and the price can jump $30 a month. Haggling might get you a free bandwidth boost, but don’t pay extra for speeds higher than 15 Mbps, because that's all you need for most streaming services.
You can get cheaper home-phone service by signing up with a company such as Ooma. You have to buy a device that you connect to your Internet service (the Telo, $150, less during promotions) and then pay only $4 or so a month for taxes. If you’re now paying about $30 a month for your phone, you’d amortize the cost of the Telo in about five months. But cutting the phone from your triple play might not save you as little as $5 or so a month, because the price of the double play for TV and Internet is likely to go up.
—Eileen McCooey
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https://www.foxnews.com/tech/how-to-decode-your-cable-bill-and-save-money