Long distance fees are simply a call you make that is out of distance in your own area. You can get charged from making calls from another area. For example, if you call in Another Country its a different area from yours which is long distance.
no
Vonage has two different packages you can choose from. The first package includes 300 minutes of outbound and long distance calling for $11.99 per month plus taxes and fees. The other package includes 750 minutes of outbound and long distance calling for $19.99 per month plus taxes and fees.
No, So long as the person with the "free long distance" plan calls the person without the free plan. Most phone companies do not charge fees to receive incoming calls, reguardless of what plan the other person has. Hope this helps.
In March of 2014 in Canada it's about $1/page for a local transmission, $1.50/page for a long distance transmission, and $6/page for an international transmission.
its a switch with a long distance
The coverage depends on where you are and where you are trying to go. Calling the local Loveland Movers groups will help you get this all stored out. Do not be surprised if additional fees are included in long distance moves.
This answer is dependent on your contract for charges (fees): According to the current Metro PCS contract(s) (all phones) - Incoming calls are charged per minute based on your rate plan independent of its source; local, domestic long distance, international long distance. IE: you are not charged a surcharge for incoming international long distance - if you are unlimited then you pay nothing, if you pay by the minute then it is the standard rate.
Depends on what you mean by "long distance"
where you trade over a long distance
if you only make several long-distance calls per year, you are best off going with a VOIP plan or a simple calling card with a toll free number on it. If you decide to get a calling card, make sure that it does not have any inactivity fees or expiration dates.
long distance? far distance?
SBC Long Distance was created in 1996.