This was posted 9 years 10 months 14 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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$0.001/Minute Calls to AU MOBILE I.e. 1 Cent Gets You 10 Minutes - PowerVoip.com

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Very good deal for calling Australian mobile from overseas (or locally).
$0.001/min to AUS Mobile and Landline.

i.e. 1 cent = 10 min of call after the initial charge of $US 0.039 flagfall.

Many calling options available, including:

  • Access number - $0.001/min to both Landline and Mobile
  • Mobile Apps - $0.001/min to both Landline and Mobile
  • Phone to Phone - $0.002/min from Au Mobile to Au Mobile
  • SIP - $0.001/min to both Landline and Mobile
  • PC to Phone - $0.001/min to both Landline and Mobile

Fine print:
All PowerVoip calls are subject to USD$ 0.039 connection fee
Credit does not expire, as far as i know.

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closed Comments

  • Flagfall? Minimum recharge? Credit expiry?

    • All PowerVoip calls are subject to USD$ 0.039 connection fee
      Credit does not expire, as far as i know.
      Min recharge: $10

  • Only Australia Landline.

    The FROM Option gives you Australia and Australia Mobile
    The TO Option only gives Australia as an option.

    So i would understand that the $0.001 is only for AU Landlines

    • Not only for landlines; mobiles included.
      Please check the rate list and you will notice that calls to Mobile are also charged at $0.001/min.

  • It seems the flag fall is 3.9 cents US. The rate is only that low when you call a mobile from your PC.

    • Thanks for pointing out out the flagfall.
      The lower rate of $0.001/min is not limited to calling from PC. See the information below:

      • Access number - $0.001c/min to both Landline and Mobile
      • Mobile Apps - $0.001c/min to both Landline and Mobile
      • Phone to Phone - $0.002c/min from Au Mobile to Au Mobile
      • SIP - $0.001c/min to both Landline and Mobile
      • PC to Phone - $0.001c/min to both Landline and Mobile

      Only phone to phone option would be higher than $0.001/min.

      • "$0.001c"

        This makes no sense; a number refers to either dollars ($) OR cents (c); "$0.001c" is impossible to interpret.

        • Corrected in original post. Thanks.

  • They are charging Au$ 0.04 flag file to call overseas using MobileVoip app.

  • +1

    The local access# is in Syd/Melb/Adel (so you have to pay for that leg of the call).
    This method is $0.0002/min + flag fall (still very cheap)

    The SIP server has a pretty high latency (ping ~320ms & 26 hops for me) So there'll be noticeable delays.

    • +1

      320ms? Sweet will just be like IDD calls back in the day with the satellite hookup.

    • The local access method shows $0.001/min for me, plus the flagfall.

    • Anyone else try out for $13? Latency to AU mobiles really as bad as 300ms?
      Confirm CID number stamp working?

  • Does anyone know about the quality of the calls?

    • Might try it but it all depends on how much I have to 'prepay'. I have a credit balance with MyNetFone which I would lose if I close the account but have not used their service in months. There is also no option to turn off their auto top up service (when your credit gets to $5 they charge it back up to $20) so in effect they keep the credit when you decide to leave them (sneaky!). The only solution I have thought of is to provide a credit card number that expires soon and they will not be able to charge it. Could I put a small amount in a Comm Bank Debit Mastecard perhaps and use that ? Just dont like how these companies have an open cheque book to debit my accounts.

  • +1

    Rates are charged in US dollar cents per minute and calls are rounded up to next minute. All rights reserved. Rates are subjected to change without notice.

    Billed per minute and rates can be changed without notice…… It's not as pretty as it seems.

  • +2

    Hi OP, please correct your example in the description "i.e. 1 cent = 10 min of call." and add the flag fee

  • min charge of $10 is always annoying when you want to test the quality of a provider. That's one thing you had to admire about DID Logic - they offered a free trial which I suppose indicated confidence in their product.

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