Neutral comparison worksheet

Questions to Ask a Lifeline Phone Provider

Compare up to three providers using the same questions about availability, network, service allowances, BYOP, SIM options, devices, fees, support, and program steps.

This worksheet does not rank providers. It contains blank editable cells and no provider-specific prices, device promises, affiliate links, or sponsored recommendations.
How to use it: Click or tap a blank cell to type notes. The page does not save entries. Print or save as PDF before closing if you want to keep your comparison.
Provider comparison worksheet with questions and three blank provider columns
QuestionProvider AProvider BProvider C
Availability
Do you currently offer Lifeline service in my state and ZIP code?
Coverage
Which network carries the service, and where can I review coverage?
Talk and text
What monthly talk and text allowance is included?
Data
How much high-speed data is included, and what happens after the limit?
Hotspot
Is mobile hotspot use included, limited, or unavailable?
BYOP
Can I bring my own phone, and how is compatibility checked?
Physical SIM
Can you provide a physical SIM, and is there a charge?
eSIM
Is eSIM activation available for Lifeline customers in my area?
Carrier unlock
Must my phone be unlocked, and what proof or device status is required?
Phone model
If a device is offered, what model and condition are currently available?
Upgrade fees
Are optional upgrades offered, and what is the full cost?
Shipping fees
Are there shipping, handling, or expedited-delivery fees?
Activation fees
Is there any activation, SIM, or setup fee?
Replacement
What is the lost, stolen, damaged, or defective device policy?
Support
How can I reach customer support, and what are the service hours?
Benefit transfer
What steps apply if I am changing companies or transferring my benefit?
Application
Which parts of eligibility verification and enrollment do I complete?
Recertification
How will I be notified about recertification or information updates?

Start with availability and network

A company may participate in Lifeline without offering the same service in every state, ZIP code, or network area. Ask whether enrollment is open where you live and which network carries the service. Then review the company's coverage information and ask about indoor, rural, roaming, and travel limitations that matter to you.

Coverage maps are useful estimates, but they cannot promise reception inside a particular home or workplace. Ask what options exist if coverage is poor after activation and whether a return, transfer, or cancellation rule applies.

Compare actual monthly service

Write down the talk, text, high-speed data, and hotspot allowances. Ask what happens after a high-speed data limit, whether data stops or slows, and when the monthly allowance resets. Confirm whether international calling, roaming, or premium features are excluded.

Separate BYOP from a device offer

BYOP means bringing a device you already own. It may require an unlocked phone, a supported model, compatible network bands, and a successful provider check. eSIM support is another separate question. A phone can support eSIM while a provider's Lifeline enrollment route uses only physical SIM in a particular area.

If a company offers a phone, ask for the current model, condition, cost, shipping, warranty, and replacement terms. Do not assume a pictured phone is the model every applicant receives. Inventory and promotions may change.

Get the full fee picture

Ask about activation, SIM, shipping, handling, upgrade, replacement, and optional service fees. A monthly Lifeline-supported plan may have no charge while an optional device or upgrade has a cost. Request the total before paying.

Application and eligibility roles

Ask which steps are handled through the official eligibility process and which steps are handled by the provider. The company should explain how to enroll after eligibility is confirmed, how a benefit transfer works, and how service begins. It should not ask you to misstate household information or create multiple applications.

Keep a record of the website, representative, date, quoted fees, and written terms. If an answer changes, ask for the current policy in writing. Do not send identity documents through a personal email address or social media account.

Recertification and ongoing responsibilities

Lifeline users may need to keep information current and respond to recertification notices. Ask how the provider communicates service matters and which notices come from the program administrator. Keep contact information updated through the proper channel.

If you change companies, confirm when the old service ends, whether a number transfer is involved, and whether a new application or eligibility confirmation is needed. Avoid cancelling a working number before understanding the transfer sequence.

Use cautious follow-up questions

When an answer is vague

Ask, “Can you show me the written policy or current plan terms?”

When a phone is pictured

Ask, “Is this exact model guaranteed, or is it an example subject to availability?”

When payment is requested

Ask, “What is the fee for, and can I verify it on your official website?”