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Money Talks  /  Bills

How to lower your internet & phone bill in Canada

Updated July 2026 · 6 min read · Bills
Call your provider and ask for the retention department. Tell them you're thinking of leaving and have a competing offer. They have deals that aren't advertised — and they'd rather cut your bill than lose you. Typical savings: $15–$30/month on internet, $10–$25/month on a phone plan. One call, ~20 minutes.

Canada has some of the most expensive telecom rates in the developed world. The kicker? The best deals aren't on the website — they're reserved for customers who are about to leave. Here's how to be that customer.

Why this works: the loyalty pricing reality

Canadian telecoms spend a lot of money acquiring new customers — promotions, device subsidies, activation credits. It's far cheaper for them to keep an existing customer by cutting their rate than to let that customer go and spend to replace them.

The problem: they only offer those deals to people who ask. If you quietly pay your bill every month without complaint, you'll keep paying full rate while the person who called yesterday got $25/month off for being mildly inconvenient. The system rewards initiative.

When to call — timing is leverage

Your leverage is highest when:

The retention department script

When you call, do not go to general customer service. Say this:

"I'd like to speak with someone in retentions, please."

That gets you to the team with actual authority to offer deals. Once you're there:

Opening

"Hi, I've been a customer for [X years] and I'm reviewing my bills. My current rate is $[amount]/month and I've found a comparable plan at [Competitor] for $[lower amount]. I'm considering making the switch — what can you do for me as a loyal customer?"

If they offer something small

"I appreciate that, but [Competitor]'s offer is still better. Is there anything closer to $[target price] that would make it worth staying?"

If they say they can't do better

"In that case, I'll need to think about it. Can you transfer me to cancellations?" (Cancellations often has one more deal to try.)

If you get an offer you like

"Thanks — can you confirm that in writing? And how long is this rate locked in?" Get everything on paper before you hang up.

What they can offer (and what they'll hide)

None of these are typically advertised. They exist specifically for this call.

The competing offer: your most important tool

Before you call, spend five minutes finding an actual alternative:

You don't have to switch — you just have to be credible. A real number is far more powerful than vague dissatisfaction.

What typical savings look like

ServiceCommon Starting RateTypical Negotiated Saving
Home internet (50–300 Mbps)$80–$110/mo$15–$30/mo
Phone plan (medium data)$55–$85/mo$10–$25/mo
Internet + phone bundle$130–$175/mo$20–$50/mo

Savings are typically valid for 12–24 months, then reset. Set a calendar reminder to call again before the promo period ends.

When to actually switch

If the retention department can't match the competitor's offer and you've gone through cancellations too, it may be time to follow through. Switching has gotten easier:

Loyalty to a telecom that isn't rewarding you is not a virtue. Switch if it makes financial sense.

The Looni connection: spotting the overpay

Most people don't realize their telecom bill has crept up until they look carefully. A $79 internet promo that expired 14 months ago is now $109 — and you never noticed because it came out on autopay. That's the kind of silent money leak that compounds month after month. One call fixes it — but first you have to see it.

Looni is built to catch the overpays before you have to

Telecom price creep is one of the most common ways Canadians overpay without realizing it. Looni is being built to surface exactly this — bills that have quietly gone up, subscriptions you forgot about, rates that no longer make sense — and show you the one move that saves you the most. Canadian, free to join.

Important: Telecom rates, promotions, and competitive options change frequently. The savings ranges in this article are illustrative estimates, not guarantees — your result will depend on your provider, region, account history, and the current competitive landscape. Always confirm any offer in writing before agreeing to new terms. This is general information, not financial advice.