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Many AT&T mobile subscribers have noticed a small increase in their most recent bill. The carrier has more than doubled the “Administrative fee” from $0.76 to $1.99.
That may be a piddling sum in the grand scheme of things, but remember that AT&T has 64.5 million cellular customers. This fee increase will net AT&T an additional $800 million per year.
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If you were hoping to argue with AT&T and get the fee reversed, don’t count on it. It’s not part of your advertised plan cost, which is more difficult for carriers to change. Every post-paid account on AT&T is assessed the increased fee no exceptions.
The bill increase is small enough that most consumers won’t notice, and the line item is way at the bottom the of the “surcharges and other fees” heading.
Carriers often try to pass these charges off as government taxes, but it’s just AT&T’s way of covering its own taxes and other costs without upsetting people. More than doubling one of these already dubious fees is exceedingly bold, though.
Verizon and Sprint have similar fees tacked onto their bills, but T-Mobile has stopped charging separate fees like this.
AT&T has released a boilerplate statement on the fee, which sidesteps any responsibility. “This is a standard administrative fee across the wireless industry, which helps cover costs we incur for items like cell site maintenance and interconnection between carriers,” AT&T says.
Making this a separate fee that AT&T can increase on a whim is entirely the carrier’s decision, though. All the other money customers pay AT&T on a monthly basis contribute to things like cell site maintenance. AT&T’s response is just silly.
The company just completed an acquisition of Time Warner valued at $108 billion, so it might be looking to beef up its portfolio in order to finance more debt. An extra few dollars won’t break the bank for most subscribers, but it’s still a very impolite thing for AT&T to do. It’s a blatant cash grab and nothing more.

