It is not illegal to access your husbands cell phone bill. It might not be moral, but there are no laws against this.
Depends on the provider, on if you have access to internet on your phone, and the phone plan. Lot of variables here.
A typical monthly phone bill is somewhere between $30 and $60 for traditional phone service. You can get cheap home phone service with a VOIP provider if you have high speed internet access for $10 to $25 per month.
If you have internet access from your phone, them you would be able to go online and sell products from your phone. Also, if you were trying to download something on to your phone, then you can get charges to your phone and you would pay for it on your next phone bill.
It means that your phone is not having a network and you cannot receive or make calls even access the internet
Generally, no. If her husband is the account holder, then unless she is an authorized contact she will have no access to her husband's bill.
In order to know what the bill amount is of landline number 44862022, you would need access to the phone account. This can be found through the customer service number of the phone company the landline is associated with.
Yes, it is illegal to have a bill in someone else's name without their permission.
The above information is very useful, just send h a mail or text him in the above number Thank me later
Some phone services offer internet access anywhere even without having a phone bill coming from them. You get just an internet charge for quite a good rate. It can be used anywhere, because it is what people use on their phones to access the internet.
A burn out cellphone is where you have no bill, no contract, no deposit, you can use it without any worries. The sim card is programmed for unlimited EVERYTHING...Only last about 30 days(after 30 days, phone # associated with the phone is disconnected or "burns out"). I think its illegal....
not on your phone bill.
The size of the appartment has nothing to do with the phone bill, the use made of the phone is what governs the size of the bill.