Yes, the cell phone company does not keep track of where the phone call comes in from. The cell phone user has free minutes and chargeable minutes. If it's not free weekends or after 9:00 for T-Mobile customers for example...you pay by using minutes.
It will not charge your landline unless it's a reverse charge call. You would first need to accept the charges, however, so don't worry.
If you have a Sprint cellphone, you will pay for an incoming call if you exceed the allowed included minutes in your calling plan, but that charge does not depend on where the call originates. If you have Sprint long distance service on your landline, you will not pay for incoming calls, unless you accept a collect call.
Yes but the charge is different unlike when voip phones call to landlines will have same charges.
If you receive a call detail with your cellular phone bill, it will include toll-free numbers, because, although they do not incur any long distance charges, they do still use airtime minutes.
Just as you would call an English landline.
If you are calling a toll-free number from a landline in Puerto Rico, it will not show up on your bill, because there is no charge. If you are calling from a mobile phone (cell phone), the call may show up on your bill, because you are still using airtime minutes, even though there is no charge for the long distance.
Sprint Long Distance service depends on which country one would like to make a call to. The price is different depending on whether the call is made to a landline or a mobile phone.
It depends on your phone provider. Some providers offer unlimited long distance, so your call would essentially be free. Others charge a per-minute rate, so your call would cost you the length of your call times the per-minute rate. Ask your service provider for details in your specific situation.
Comware does not charge for long distance calls. The long distance call use is included in the cell phone contract. However, there is a charge for international used of the Comware long distance phone service. A call to the local Comwave cell phone company will provide a more adept explanation in regards to charging for long distance calls.
There's no simple answer to that question. In North America, and particularly in the US and Canada, landline numbers and mobile phones (cell phones) share the same geographic area codes, and the numbers are indistinguishable. In most areas, you can port a cell phone number to a landline or vice-versa. The charge to call a landline in North America is exactly the same as the charge to call a cell phone whose number is associated with the same city or town. That should be true, no matter where in the world you're calling from. However, there may be significant differences in the charges depending on which long distance company you use and which calling plan you have subscribed to.
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In most countries, you are not charged for a call unless it is answered. However, mobile phones in many countries may begin charging even before a call is answered, if you let it ring more than the allowed number of rings. In Denmark, landline phones charge you beginning from the moment you get dial tone, even if you don't dial any number at all.
Not directly. The only way would be to call another land-line - then have them forward the call to the number you're trying to reach. You will be charged for the call to the first land-line number - and the party forwarding the call will bear the charge to the destination number.